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- From: chrisw@chopin.FtCollins.NCR.com (Chris Whitley)
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: RE: Authoritarian Parents (as kids grow up)
- Message-ID: <3202@ncr-mpd.FtCollinsCO.NCR.COM>
- Date: 17 Nov 92 18:51:50 GMT
- Sender: uucp@ncr-mpd.FtCollinsCO.NCR.COM
- Reply-To: chrisw@chopin.FtCollins.NCR.com (Chris Whitley)
- Distribution: world
- Organization: NCR Microelectronics, Ft. Collins, CO
- Lines: 40
-
- >>4. Authoritarian parents get more confused and desperate as their children
- >> get older and more independent, as their ability to control (or even
- >> influence) their children declines.
- >>
- >
- >I grew up with an authoritarian parent (at least one! :-), and I
- >think I would disagree here. My father breathed a great sigh of
- >relief when we were no longer dependent on him (that is after we
- >graduated from college). I think being an authoritarian parent is
- >a great burden (dictators don't really like themselves very
- >much), and is driven by anger at their own lack of control in
- >being needed so very much by their children. They get freed up,
- >too, when their "charges" grow up.
-
- I think that there is something in between dependency where authoritarian
- parents can control and graduating from college. There is a gradual
- lessening of parental control throughout a child's life, no matter
- how authoritarian a parent is. However, in the teen years, when an
- adolescent begins to go out with friends and to date, this loss of
- control is particularly significant. Adolescents have to make choices
- about controlled substance use, how they will obey traffic laws, how
- they will interact with the opposite sex, what kind of crowd they will
- hang out with, etc. Parents can try to influence these things, and
- authoritarian parents REALLY try to CONTROL them, but the bottom line
- is that the kid will have the opportunity to make some of their own choices.
-
- I specifically remember (with awe, sadness, and amusement) my mother
- hysterically hollering at me at age 17, after graduating from highschool
- and before going off to college six states away, "You think you're going
- to be able to go off and do whatever you want, and that I can't stop you.
- Well, it just isn't so!" Ah, but by that age, one really does have the
- power to do what one wants, and to choose to abide by the consequences!
- It was a pitiful demise of authority, but I remember thinking she could
- holler all she wanted....
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Chris Whitley email: Chris.Whitley@FtCollinsCO.NCR.COM
- NCR Microelectronics Phone: (303) 223-5100 ext. 314
- 2001 Danfield Court Fax: (303) 226-9556
- Ft. Collins, CO 80525
-