Re: Are you OK there, Perfectly OK Mom?
by
Mujokan
04/26/2008, 9:36 AM #
I'd agree that it's difficult to write anything about parenting decisions without attracting criticism, and that people are less civil on the internet than they would be face to face. We can relish the chance to vent some spleen, also, and a mob mentality can sometimes develop.
But Bonnie didn't write her article as a parenting guide. She's exploring an area where she obviously feels some misgivings about how things have gone. She's trying to place most of the blame on herself, but it seems to me the way she's framing the anecdotes is also designed to make the son look pretty feeble, also.
This may be journalistic hyperbole -- but that's not really relevant to the issue of attracting criticism. Posters can only know what she tells them. It could be a problem of cultural misunderstanding -- maybe this is normal practice in the upper middle classes. But there are some problems here, it seems to me, even if that's true. She isn't perfectly OK, and while she realizes that to some extent, it seems like there's still a level of denial here which will inevitably attract some tough words from commenters.
Nate's lack of enthusiasm for schoolwork, for choosing a career, for taking an active role in important decisions about his future, is very strongly contrasted with his mother's willingness to simply step in and do whatever was needed herself. He takes standardized tests and writes compositions "at gunpoint". Meanwhile what's most important to him is his Xbox, and "gets lost in his imagination". He ends up in a high-pressure university course where he's miserable. He spends a lot of time sleeping, and watching the Cooking Channel for comfort. He hopes he's developmentally disabled, so that he wouldn't feel so much responsibility for this situation, and thinks his parents will disown him. Of course, he fails badly. The conclusion the mother draws is "I hadn't finished raising him yet". I would say a little more self-reflection might have been appropriate at this point in the narrative.
I'd been hammering Nate with my personal list of essential maturity skills before he left home. One must be able to make decisions, develop relationships, understand transactions, show up consistently, communicate clearly,
I droned while making him double recipes of butterscotch pudding. On
his own, he does not e-mail and rarely calls me. I tried to insist he
check daily for my electronic correspondence, helpfully providing a
list of cyber cafes in his neighborhood.
She's researching cyber-cafe locations so that he can check daily for her missives. His response: ""There are physical limitations which may prevent me from fulfilling
your rules. I will make them personal goals to
be accomplished." Who speaks like that?
More self-help talk: ""If you do something every day for a 30 days, it becomes routine." They are obviously spending a lot of time talking about his shortcomings. She's been "hammering" him with a list of ways he needs to change. What I'm suprised about here is that he's still so accomodating and polite. Part of that might be not biting the Visa card that feeds him, but maybe there is a level of Stockholm syndrome here that needs to be addressed. I don't think it's good for kids to be so immersed in linguistic analysis of their own personality problems, especially with their parents. It's liable to lead to becoming neurotic, self-doubting, a Woody Allen kind of personality. He shouldn't be participating so enthusiastically in it -- but if your mother is spending a lot of time explaining where she thinks you have problems, it's kind of hard to disagree, if you're a good kid.
Why did Bonnie put in the bit about him complaining about her posting the rent check? She's putting him down in public there, justifying something maybe she felt guilty about, which made her doubt her own competence. At the same time., she's pointing out where he still has clerical and financial problems, which enables her to go on building her own self-esteem by handling those "problems" for him.
Like I said in my own thread, I'm a bit like Nate. I know what it's like to need to escape into your imagination. Video games can be a substitute for real-world competence. This kid really does need to find something for himself where he can get some respect: both self-respect and respect from others. It seems like Bonnie realizes this now, but maybe not to the extent she thinks she does. He doesn't need protection, or to have decisions made for him, or to email her every day, as much as he needs a sense of mastery and competence. After all, that's the central theme in his mother's self-image, and her opinion is obviously important to him.