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What about the bad quality of contemporary cartoons, I’ll tell you about a talk between a children’s psychologist and the parents of children attending the same kindergarten as my daughter. She was telling us about the harm of contemporary cartoons, which form the matrix of a cruel woman. As an example, she took the cartoon "Shrek," where there is a scene, when the girl hits the face of the main character with her legs. The psychologist said that a woman can’t behave like that, because she’s, well, a future mother with plump cheeks and so on. However, women can be different, the sooner a child gets to know it, the better. Don’t create fairy tales and myths, don’t impose the stereotypes about "real women" and "real men" upon a child. The less you lie, the more adequate your child will be.

§ 2.1. Supporting Point

Parents, who are happy living their own private life, are happy if the child begins to live independently and has an i

There are people who are fine under any conditions. There are people who demand special conditions to live. You have to make your child understand that he or she is the main condition to live. You are alive, then live. If we take the universal purpose of parenthood on a planetary scale, it is the same as that of a lion or a dolphin or a dog: to teach a baby to be responsible for his/her life. This quality doesn’t appear by itself at a certain age – it needs to be formed and created.

You can’t teach responsibility with fear. Fear is a stimulating, not motivating factor, and it works as a temporary measure. Parents are unable to forbid anything. Even if you forbid now, you won’t be able to run after a child for all your life and watch, forbid and control. At that very moment when you are not near, the child will do what he/she wants and you will never know about that. You have taught your child to give "right" answers, you’re calling home and asking: "What are you doing, so

Children should have a supporting point to choose themselves what they like and what they don’t like. When there is no such point, children have to rely on what’s "right" and "wrong," but these values are changing constantly. Back then, if you had sex before the wedding, it was a shame. Now if you don’t have sex before the wedding, it’s a shame as well. If you instill the stereotypes about the norm, you make your children vulnerable for the changing world, for assessment. They start believing in the absolute, but then suddenly everything turns head over heels and they get confused.

I am doing homework!..

When children start believing in the absolute assessment, they become silly, dependent, extremely vulnerable and turn into "social sheep" telling their mom, "I’ve seen this chocolate commercial on TV, and I need this chocolate. I can’t live without it!" The life of such children depends on who they will meet today. If they meet a member of a sect, they will become sectarians. If they meet a thief, they will become thieves. If they meet a drug addict, they will become drug addicts. Mothers usually do not see the root of their child’s problems in themselves and lay the blame on school and TV. However, millions of people watch TV and go to school, but not all of them become drug addicts.

Once I talked to the mother of a drug addict. As soon as she entered my office, I told her, "Do you want me to tell you what kind of son you have? Irresponsible, weak-willed and purposeless." – "Yes. How do you know that?" – "Because you are very responsible, decisive and purposeful." If some traits of character are hypertrophied in the mother, the same traits are absolutely atrophied in the child – the child doesn’t need them. You have to delegate something to a child – responsibility or honesty; then, it will become his/her individual quality.



Mothers having no private life start taking it away from children. They are anxious, if their children has eaten, whom they meet, what they are doing, have they had enough sleep. The parents all need to attend my grandma’s courses. Two of her children died of hunger. In our time of abundance, she was absolutely indifferent about my satiety. The child didn’t ask for food; that was good. They called me to have lunch, I refused – "well, if you don’t want to eat, it’s up to you." My granddad prayed to God, they ate and cleaned the table. If I was not in time – I was hungry. So, filling in my stomach became my own problem and responsibility.

Parent responsibility is also to teach children to accept somebody’s opinion, if the children need it themselves, or not to accept, stay independent and uninvolved, knowing that they personally don’t need it. For example, the child comes home from school and says, "The teacher doesn’t like me." Prior to passing a sentence or diagnose, ask the child, why it happens. The inventory begins. It turns out that the teacher doesn’t like the child for some actions. "First, the teacher doesn’t have to like you. She has to teach you. Second, why do you provoke the teacher to start the conflict? Are you defending anything so important to you that you are ready to spoil relationship with the teacher? Do you think it’s worth behaving this way in the future? If it’s worth, then don’t complain. Do I get it right: you spoil the relationship for me to go to school and restore them?"

There are three questions that work magically with children:

The first one: What are you doing now? It gives them an opportunity to realize, where they are, what they are and what their activity is aimed at – a kind of a "stop" signal.

The second one: What do you think?

The third (control) one: When?

Thus, we form responsibility. Children quickly learn to give the "right" answers to parents’ questions, but their individuality isn’t revealed through "right" answers. The first time you ask your children what they think, they will try to say something you’ll like. We ourselves provoke children to lie: say something to your mummy, so that she would calm down; say something to your daddy, so that he would leave you alone.

The most important thing for parents is to ask not waiting for a certain answer: you ask, but you don’t correct. By asking a question, we give children the chance to find the answer themselves. So, what they say doesn’t excite or disappoint us. I have heard the answer and accepted it. Only then, without the external assessment, approval or condemnation, the children’s answer is accepted as their own. "What kind of friends do you have, son?" – "Good friends." – "Why do you think they are good?" and leave him with this answer. If there are no expectations, the child’s answer will be objective; the child will answer himself. Thus children learn their own lessons, which are the most important. When we don’t give answers, children start looking for them inside and, if they confirm that they are right, they gain confidence in themselves, a supporting point. In other words, children gain the courage to use their own brain (to reflect, to create and to manifest) and gain confidence: relying on my own opinion, I’ll get what I want.