Parenting Issues: The Danger of Undermining, Questioning or Second Guessing Your Spouse
Accepting Your Spouse's Parenting Style
In some parenting relationships, one parent may confuse his role as spouse and father with that of supervisor and manager. He may habitually second guess his wife's decisions or undermine her authority with the children. I say he, only because the more traditional role-play involves dad going to work and mom caring for the children. If mom is the primary caregiver while dad goes to work, dad should not expect to tell mom how to manage the children while he is gone. He should be willing to listen and offer advice if she requests ideas. He should not micromanage her or attempt to control or correct how she parents their children.
If he sees a gross miscarriage of justice (physical abuse, substance abuse) he should seek out ways to help. Wives don't tell their husbands how to do their jobs at work. The home is a SAHM's workplace. The husband is not her supervisor or boss. Many Christian's confuse the Biblical passage 'the husband is the head of the household'. Mother is not one of the children: she is the spouse and partner. It's easy for power hungry men to claim this Biblical passage as a right to oversee every little decision and pass judgment. This is extremely unhealthy for the couple, the children and the family as a whole. The old saying 'you can't make bricks without straw' applies to parenting. When mom (or dad) feels that they must constantly answer to spouse authority they feel demeaned and begin to question their own ability to parent children. Questioning decisions also sets a horrible example for children. It upsets and confuses them. I use the husband and wife scenario because it the more common one.
Naturally, when the roles are reversed, the same holds true. When dad cares for the children, mom should butt out and not nitpick. This is especially true if dad is taking the children so that mom can have some 'mommy time'. I've witnessed countless times when mom proclaims herself exhausted by childcare. Dad takes over, but mom, unwilling to let go of control, is busy ordering him about. In the one short portion of Jon and Kate Plus 8 that I was able to stomach watching, Kate spent about fifteen minutes reading Jon the riot act for not putting the children in their matching red, white and blue coats for a 4th of July parade. That's big, Kate. Definitely something to cause a family frenzy over.
This article is not meant to criticize men or women in particular. It's meant to demonstrate to parents what are unhealthy parenting issues and how they affect the family. For more parenting discussions, visit my blog at www.parentinghotline.blogspot.com. All the best to you and yours.
Published by Marilisa Kinney Sachteleben
Happy wife. Mom of 4. 10+ year homeschool vet. Certified K-8/special ed. Yahoo! News Beat Writer: Parenting, Michigan, Detroit. Published on Helium, SEED, AT&T, Diabetes Active, Mapquest, Best Contractors, H... View profile
- Television Parenting and Motherhood Skills Television tips on parenting and motherhood learned from the Cosby Show.
-
Good Parenting Seal Honors New Parenting Through Separation and Divorce...
The Good Parenting Seal from Parental Wisdom®, a patented parenting website that recognizes parents as the real experts in knowing their children best awards Stop Fighting...
-
Get a Second Opinion - Your Life Could Depend Upon It!
Never, ever, fail to get a second opinion for a serious medical problem.
- Positive Parenting Tip Christmas Edition: Different Traditions This one is all about teaching the children to respect different traditions. This is Christmas thought number three and is thought number sixty-five in the positive parenting tip series.
- Positive Parenting Tips Christmas Edition: Decorating Fun Enjoy this first tip in the Christmas edition of the Positive Parenting Tip series. This is thought number sixty-three, but is the first in the special Christmas tips.
- Health Risks: Never Second Guess Your Symptoms
- Americans No Longer Question Authority: Is it Too Late to Return to Due Process?
- My Personal Parenting Tips
- A Short Guide to Some Basic Step-parenting Issues
- The Parenting Mistake Journal
- Successful Co-Parenting Part 4
- The Trials and Tribulations of Parenting
- It's Already that Time: How Much Will You Pay for Summer Camp?
- To Punish Daughter, Dad Destroys Her Laptop: Tough Love or Too Extreme? (Video)
- What Do You Do with the Valentine's Day Cards Your Kids Bring Home from School?
- Why I Fired My Child's Pediatrician (And How it Saved My Son's Life)
- Parenting Guru: A special Valentine for a mystery 4th grade girl
2 Comments
Post a CommentFunny how we so often learn the hard lessons in life by hindsight instead of foresight. I look back at my own child-rearing years and can see now how I coulda'/shoulda' handled things on a more adult level. You advice is timely and hopefully well-accepted.
Like the Beatles once sang, "Come Together". It is truly the best parenting advice. Good read, cheers.