Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Please, Please, Can we let the Yelling Stop!



(something I wrote over a year ago and just re-found and am posting)

We talked DNA this week. About height and skin color and the girls’ mild fear of inheriting my ear dimensions. Some stuff you can change, and some things are just the cards you’re dealt when your parents hooked up.

As parents it would be nice if children’s behavior and personalities were pre-wired by our DNA. We could just put our parenting on Autopilot. Feed them, pack them off to school, put them to bed. But luckily for our children, their own little personalities aren’t pre-destined. They may look like us, but they aren’t doomed to eventually become the boring parents they inherited.

So as parents: yes, we’re stuck with rolling with the complicated punches of raising them. Even as each new successive punch messes up the predictable pattern that made us feel like we were at last having some parenting successes.

Our early childhood parenting with them was more stressful, yes, but it was simpler too. Keeping our babies close, protecting them from the things they are not capable of understanding, despite sleep deprivation, was relatively easy. But as their height notches rose on our kitchen wall, so too, the outside pressures on our children accrued. So many outside influences beyond parental control enter the frame. The girl’s school closing. The death of a family member. Unemployment. Earthquakes and the threat thereof. Losing every single Under-6 soccer game we played this season. Did we win one game? I honestly can’t remember.

And then there’s that internal-sisterhood-dynamic. Havana and Ily are both very different and at the same time indistinguishable. Ily currently likes to sleep-in, Havana wakes with the sun. Yet Ily fights going to sleep and Havana treasures her sleep. Ily, at times, wants to be treated like the youngest and at other times demands to be treated as age-equal to her sister.

As sisters, they were born into two similar but different worlds. Havana was born to parents who knew little to nothing about parenting, at least that’s how we felt. Ily, as second child, faired better on that count. But Ily never had the individual attention her older sister had. The childhood bus don’t slow down and we're forced, as parents, to keep running after it. But two childhoods running simultaneously, constantly influencing each other’s behavior, is more complex than anything our imagination prepared us for.

These days, the main challenge to our parental patience is the yelling. Havana yells now and then, but for her younger sister it’s simply become common currency. Never in public, never with teachers, never with her friends. Only in the safety zone of her little family. Lucky us.

When your age dictates your secondary status in so many ways, a loud voice can sometimes help close that gap for you. When your mom or dad are running back and forth from fridge to stove to cupboard, then a whisper for attention will be deferred by the greatest of parents. However, chopping onions or raw chicken, can be dropped on the spot when that higher pitch of yelling bounces off the living room walls and hits you like a fire alarm.

Havana, when she was five, yelled far less, but then the social climate for her was different. And when Ily is yelling, while the crime of yelling in the court of family life is absolutely indefensible, the fault does not always lay with the yeller. The blame doesn’t always fall squarely on the yellees either. But we all suffer. Ily did not create her environment, she simply deals with it with the best cards she’s been dealt and her small tightly stretched vocal chords, in short, her scream, is still her strongest suit when in need of attention.

Generally, if we have the energy, the most beneficial and least damaging response is to look Ily in the eye and talk quietly to her. We might not get to the root of the issue, but we can at least do some good, quality, one-on-one. Bring everything down. So the chicken gets all dried out and rubbery and our flow gets undone.  Truth be known, this approach almost always works. And everyone can deal with a crappy dinner. A little intense eye contact goes an amazingly long, long way.

However, the angelic parents we all hope to be, aren’t always present in these small crises.

At other times, our endless patience is cornered, and the blood pressure is tested. So, instead of talking it down, we increase the decibels. It’s not our fault. We’ve got a spatula in one hand and an all-out yelling match between sisters on the other. Or worse, one has caused bodily injury to the other. So, naturally, we introduce the louder voice in the room. Enough! Enough! That’s always followed by that horrible disparate silence of those being shut up by someone bigger than them and our own silence as we face the fact that we are simply a bad parent. It feels like an awful use of hierarchical oppression. Not the most wonderful way to bond with your children, but hey, it does happens.

Eventually the girls will outgrow the yelling. Both of them will learn to exercise more restraint. Cooperation will increase. And yelling will be reserved for more important stuff. As parents, all we can do is throw down a few rough behavioral guidelines in our words and in our deeds. And hopefully as the girls age, they will learn how best to weather most of the emotional storms that come their way.

The most important thing of all, methinks, is that when they need to express strong feelings, they can always be angry to us, to their parents. Even when it’s not about us. When they’re not yet ready or comfortable yelling at the rest of the world, when their homework gets them down, when they’re pissed at how things are rolling with their friends, whatever the issue is, here at home, with mom and dad, this is the place they can always come and yell. That door will always and forever be open to them. 

And eventually our hearing will peter out anyway.