This book offers an engaging and well-researched comparison about parenting philosophies across different cultures. The author is well-traveled and has provided an insightful look at how Americans contrast against people from other countries. I was impressed with her ability to concisely discuss concepts such as caring for infants, the material possessions we buy for our children, the food we provide, how we monitor and educate our children, the way we supervise our kids, the activities we occupy their time with, and the morals, kindness, and sense of responsibility we instill in our children.
Overall, it's an enlightening book and a sincere attempt to give parents an understanding of different methods of successfully raising children that may be different from our own. I really enjoyed reading this book and got some reassurances that some of my 'lazy parenting' practices might not be so strange or even detrimental after all.
interesting quotes:
"Scholars from a variety of disciplines are discovering that the keys to raising resilient, compassionate, competent children can be found in the simplest practices. Often it means doing less, like giving kids time to play away from adult eyes, even if that means they will have disagreements with their friends that an adult won't help them solve. Sometimes it means doing more, like requiring them to do regular chores so they feel competent and needed." (p. 9)
"The most successful parenting practices are consistent, reinforced by others, and have conviction behind them. Parenting is so much easier if raising children is not up to an individual parent or family, but is considered a community mandate that everyone shares." (p. 10)
"Observing mother-baby pairs in slumber, McKenna found that co-sleeping mothers' and babies' sleep cycles tended to be remarkably synchronized, which helped the mother get more restful sleep because she and the baby tended to enter lighter sleep at the same time. Tending to a baby who is right there next to her, when she's in a light stage of sleep anyway, isn't as disruptive to a mother's sleep as having to rouse herself out of a deep, groggy sleep, get out of bed, and walk to another room." (p. 19)
"When it came to raising children, most parents I met felt that it was important to get kids accustomed to less from the start. It is better for their characters, their imagination, their resourcefulness, and their future lives not to experience immediate or excessive material gratification." (p. 44)
"What can we learn from other cultures where consumerism isn't so rampant? The first step is to recognize and trust that providing less for our kids really is a viable pathway to things that matter too, things - such as creativity, resourcefulness, moderation, self-restraint, and self-satisfaction - that kids carry with them far longer into their future lives than the material goods they ask for today." (p. 54)
"The Japanese believe that knowing that someone believes in you enough to be strict toward you gives you confidence." (p. 103)
"Recess itself isn't just just an aid to learning; it is itself educational. Free play during recess is cognitively beneficial, as children who play with one another need to juggle and incorporate another person's perspectives and views. This is a challenging but important cognitive task for them to master, and is one of the building blocks for future creativity, which requires the ability to step outside your own limited experience of the world. Studies show that peers, rather than adults, contribute to more sophisticated imaginary play, because their stories and suggestions help to collectively take the play to a new and higher level." (p. 158)
"Our teens care about their parents' high regard for them more than we are led to believe, and the cultural idea that kids rebel against high parental expectations is not borne out by evidence: for example, research on American adolescents; drug and alcohol use shows that teens who are emotionally close to their parents and know they disapprove of substance use are more likely to abstain." (p. 188)
"Although as parents we must teach our children to speak up when they are in danger in order to keep them safe, we have an equal responsibility to teach them to be conscientious and kind on a daily basis." (p. 220)
"Sometimes what looks like rudeness in children is actually just social awkwardness. Children are inexperienced in the ways of the world. They can't magically know how they're expected to behave if no one has told them in advance." (p. 230)
"Doing household chores (particularly from a young age, around three or four) is a strong predictor of success later on in life, including abstaining from drugs, graduating from college, and getting a job. Other research indicates that children who are more hardworking in tangible ways are more 'nurturant' and 'sociable,' and even have a more developed moral sense and awareness of other people's needs." (p. 239)
Cleaning isn't considered a menial task in Japan. Influenced as Japan is by Buddhist thinking, cleaning is thought to help train the mind and lead to spiritual awakening." (p. 244)
"Parents in cultures where children are expected to competently help out, take care of others, and be responsible for themselves and their younger siblings benefit from the ways these expectations consistently reinforce one another." (pp. 257-258)
"It would be a powerful combination if we taught our children that, yes, their questions, opinions, talents, and accomplishments are genuinely important, and that kindness, empathy, self-reliance, and community are important as well." (p. 269)
"The relationships we have with our children change over time - as our children grow and go through different life stages and as we, too, change, But it turns out that what our children need as they become adolescents is remarkably similar to what they needed as young children: parents who maintain warm, loving relationships with them while at the same time providing them with clear and consistent boundaries, who give them the right kind of autonomy when they are ready for it, who provide them with the tools, encouragement, and practice they need to manage their own lives, and who believe in and support their ability to become competent, happy, successful, and responsible adults." (p. 270)
new word: liminal