Face it: you don’t always tell your children the truth.
The question is, “Is this a problem?”
Well, yes, because truth
will out, as the saying goes. Short-term gains in peace of mind and
no-questions-asked will eventually be replaced by the realization that you
cannot be completely trusted.
Do not imagine that you can deceive your children forever.
They will put two-and-two together.
Their friends will clue them in. They will eavesdrop on your conversations with
your friends and family. Long before you expect it, the truth will be exposed
and your credibility along with it.
We parents are tempted to make two sorts of misleading
statements: those intended to manipulate a child and those intended to protect
him. How we begin to more consistently tell the truth depends on which sort of
untruth we’re talking about.
Lies we tell to manipulate our children – telling them they
will go to jail for not using the potty or that their Halloween candy contains
bugs – these are completely avoidable. We tell them because we’re out of better
ideas for guiding children’s behavior so that scaring our kids or grossing them
out seems easy and expedient.
Being
patient and doing the hard work of toilet-training or being calmly parental in
setting limits on candy will be more effective in the long run. Avoiding the
truth derails the development of the sort of skills and decision-making ability
we’d like our children to have. In addition, your lies will be exposed. So
don’t manipulate your kids but tell the truth.
Sometimes instead we tell lies to protect our children from
unpleasant realities. But if you stop
and think about it, you’ll notice that we tell these lies to protect ourselves. We might be uncomfortable
with the truth – Grandma has dementia and doesn’t recognize anyone anymore; the
cat got eaten by a coyote last night. They are too young for such truths, we
say. But, really, we are unwilling to explain things. We are sad and upset by
events we ourselves don’t understand. We don’t have all the answers. How can we
tell our kids?
Remember that they will discover the truth on their own.
Better by far to be the one they hear it from than to hear it from someone
else, after having been told a falsehood by you. You don’t have to have all the
answers. It’s okay to say, “I don’t know.” It’s okay to cry if the truth makes
you sad. But telling lies is never a good idea, even with the best of
intentions.
Notice that when you tell your child the truth it doesn’t
have to be the whole truth. You don’t need to go into detail. Tell what you
know in simple terms suited to the age of the child and then wait for a
question to arise. Answer that truthfully. Wait for another question. Some kids
want to know everything and will ask questions endlessly as they work things
out in their minds. Some kids want less information and will ask next to
nothing. Either way is okay.
One of the tough tasks of parenthood is the gradual
revelation to our children of the hard truths of existence. Step up to this duty
and fulfill it with grace. Along the way, don’t damage your street cred with
falsehoods meant to manipulate and deceive. Honesty is the best policy.
©
2013, Patricia Nan Anderson. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed
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