Hey Mom, Need Some Help?
By Annie Fox, M.Ed.
www.anniefox.com
Recently
read a cautionary tale from Dear Abby. The letter writer was a martyr…
ahem, a mother describing how her two adult daughters arrive for
Thanksgiving each year expecting guest-treatment. For some mysterious
reason, these “girls” never offer to help their mother with the annual
banquet she produces for 20+ people. That is, not until Mom, frazzled
and frustrated slumps to the kitchen floor in her gravy-stained apron
and whimpers like a pathetic dog. At which point the princesses exchange
eye-rolls and deign to lift sponge or dish towel.
My blood pressure climbed and I too became frustrated and resentful… at
the mom! I mean, really, where does she think her lovelies learned to
blithely ignore household tasks? How in the world had they reached
adulthood without a pinch of common courtesy that demands that even if
you truly are a dinner guest you offer to help. (You are also, as my mom
taught me, required to bring bakery goodies in a pink box.)
So, Dear Abby Mom, if you’re wondering where Drizella and Anastasia
acquired their unattractive attitudes, look in the mirror. Do not get
distracted by smudges and reach for the Windex! It’s time for serious
self-reflection about the kind of parent you are. But wait! Faultfinding
is a waste of time and Thanksgiving’s around the corner. Here are some
quick tips for changing the family dynamic this holiday season and
forevermore. And for anyone else needing help getting help around the
house, these are for you too:
1. Apologize to your daughters and/or sons today. (I’m
serious!) You’ve taught them that your job is to serve them throughout
eternity. So it’s not their fault they bought into it. But you were
wrong. Your job, as their parent, is to prepare them to be fully
functioning independent adults. By compulsively doing for them that
which they should learn to do for themselves, you do them no favors. In
fact, you’ve held them back in their development of a cooperative
spirit. How they act now, as young adults, is not your doing, but you
certainly contributed to their self-centeredness. Admit it. Apologize.
Move forward.
2. Make a list of all the things that need to be done
between now and the dinner bell on Thursday. Oh, and don’t forget to add
one general last item: “Clean up after dinner.”
3. Share the list with your kids and any other
able-bodied family members who will be attending. Say, as assertively as
possible (no shouting, pleading, guilt-tripping, etc.) “This is what
needs to be done. Which of these tasks are you going to take
responsibility for?” If you have no confidence in their promises (due to
past flakiness) then get it in writing. After each self-selected
assignment, say, “Thanks. We’re all counting on you.”
4. Make a statement. Get used to saying, whenever
necessary (holiday or not) “Hey guys, I need some help in here.” Notice
that it’s a statement, not a question as in: “Will you please help me?”
There’s a good reason for that. Annie Fox Research shows that when you
want something done by your spouse or your children, your chances of
compliance drop to a mere 20% when you pose your request in the form of
a question that has a “yes” or “no” answer. Dear Abby Mom shouldn’t be
asking, “Can I count on you to help?” “Can I ask you a favor?” “Do you
have a minute?” No, no, not now, Mom. See what I mean? Make a statement.
5. Know that you are loved. You don’t need to do it all
to be loved and admired by your family. You already are loved and
admired. And guess what? No one will love you less if they know that you
didn’t personally crush each cranberry and do everything else without
help. But you will probably appreciate everyone more if you all work
together.
6. Teach them! If you don’t get the whole family
involved in the process, how will they ever learn to a) make a killer
feast on their own some day at which you will be an honored guest and b)
teach your future grandkids how to be cooperative members of the family?
And you want them to learn all that, right? Right!
So good luck with the new program and Happy Thanksgiving, from our home
to yours!
About the Author:
Annie
Fox, M.Ed. ia an award winning author, educator, and online adviser for
parents and teens.
http://anniefox.com
Read excerpts from her books: Too Stressed to Think? And the new Middle
School Confidential™ series.
Download (free) her entire Teen Survival Guide to Dating & Relating,
http://teensurvivalguide.com
Listen to her podcast series “Family Confidential: Secrets of Successful
Parenting”
Read more Practical Parenting
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