THE NEED TO DEFLATE THE OVERINFLATED MINDS OF YOUNGSTERS
THE NEED TO DEFLATE THE OVERINFLATED MINDS OF YOUNGSTERS
By Domenick J. Maglio PhD. Traditional Realist
Our children’s impression of their performance of almost
everything they do is terrific to stupendous. After years of their parents,
teachers, coaches and other authority figures being propagandized not to harm a
child’s fragile self-esteem, we are producing delusional people.
Adults are constantly supervising our children. There is
little opportunity for them to play outside with their peers. By nature
children are not politically correct. They say whatever pops into their heads,
which is often brutally honest. A
youngster’s evaluation of a peer is impactful as it is direct and usually devastatingly
accurate.
Today many parents consider this uncensored peer speech,
“bullying.” Although in the recent past it was looked upon as the growing pains
of normal childhood. Youngsters have to learn that they are not the center of
the world. Another child’s insensitivity towards him assists a child to learn he
is not as perfect as he has been led to believe. He begins to realize there are
ways to handle complementary or nasty criticism. Becoming desensitized and
toughening up youngsters is necessary training for survival and success and no
group does it better than other children.
In the absence of straight forward peer feedback, children
receive mostly positive filtered messages not to damage their feelings, although
it falsely elevates their ego.
The modern culture is explicit that any negative assessment of
a youngster is destructive, bordering on abusive. Everyone has to win a trophy,
no score is kept in a game, the majority of elementary school students are on
the honor roll and other false tactics are employed to avoid anyone feeling
like a loser. Even President Obama declared everyone a winner at this year’s
Easter egg roll. This has become common practice.
Authority figures have learned it is easier to take the path
of least resistance by focusing solely on the upside and forgetting all
together the downside of a person’s performance. This is especially true with
the young child. Training a child to confront and overcome his difficulties has
disappeared in the role of parenting. We must avoid issues that would make a
child uncomfortable even though it is necessary to improve his performance.
This has become the norm.
The child is content without having to meet higher
expectations. The parent does not have to deal with motivating their child
since everyone gives them positive reports.
Parents rationalize these glowing reports even when they know deep down
that it is less than accurate. They do not want to confront another personal
issue. Although the positive statements about the child make parents feel good,
the youngster becomes less able to make a realistic assessment of his abilities
as compared to others.
Anyone who attempts to set the false-esteem-child straight
by telling him he has a lower level of competency as compared to others is
considered mean spirited. According to
the parent’s view it is a humiliating experience for their precious child to be
told he is not number one. They get angry at the messenger rather than correct
the child’s actions.
We have gone from raising neurotic children who worry they might
not have done their best to self-centered children who think whatever they do
is great. These children that do not care about doing something well are simply
delusional individuals who have no motivation to do things correctly. They take every short cut to get the job done
quickly without any concern whether it is quality or not. They “do not care,” which makes them
“careless.”
Authority figures act as if they do not have time to
continually require quality work from the children. This acceptance of
mediocrity is being unconsciously taught by the parents, teachers, music, art
and sport instructors. The reality that
excellence in anything requires someone to focus, give effort and persevere is
becoming a thing of the past.
Only by parents and other authority figures being honest in
evaluating a child’s performance can the child learn what he/she needs to do to
improve. It teaches the youngsters that they cannot stand still rather they
have to work hard every day to get better.
This approach will adjust the child’s overinflated and false
self-esteem. It will reinforce being careful to do one’ best reversing the
“get-by” careless approach to life. The
child will develop pride in his work.
Deflating of a child’s overinflated ego in the short run will
be uncomfortable to painful. The payoff is the child is shocked out of his
delusional state. This realizing he
needs to work hard to become the best is a lesson worth more than being left a
million dollar trust fund from his parents.
Domenick Maglio, PhD. is a columnist carried by various
newspapers, an author of several books and owner/director of Wider Horizons
School, a college prep program. You can visit Dr. Maglio at
www.drmaglio.blogspot.com.
Labels: authority figures, false esteem
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