In this discussion, the challenge of balancing praise and accountability in parenting takes center stage. Listeners explore why excessive flattery can be harmful, leading to inflated egos in children. The importance of honest communication and teaching resilience is emphasized, urging parents to foster self-awareness in their kids. Drawing wisdom from Seneca, the idea of exposing children to the truth, even when it's uncomfortable, is presented as essential for their growth and character development.
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volunteer_activism ADVICE
Balanced Parenting
Avoid endlessly praising your children and having a bias towards their strengths.
Balance your love for them with honest feedback to help them become self-aware.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Honest Communication
Speak honestly with your children, even if it's hard, and hold them accountable.
Let them hear the truth and sometimes fear it, but also ensure they always respect it.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Discipline and Restraint
Don't reward children for outbursts; give them what they want when calm.
Expose them to their family's resources but don't let them freely use them.
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Seneca's "Of Anger" delves into the nature and destructive power of anger, offering practical guidance on managing and overcoming this emotion. He explores the psychological and social consequences of anger, emphasizing its corrosive effects on both the individual and society. Seneca provides insightful observations on the origins of anger, suggesting that it stems from faulty judgments and unrealistic expectations. He advocates for self-control and reason as antidotes to anger, urging readers to cultivate inner peace and emotional resilience. The essay remains relevant today, offering timeless wisdom on managing anger and fostering emotional well-being.
You love your kids more than anything. You think they’re God’s gift (which they are, to you!). You want them to know how you feel about them, and you feel bad when they feel bad about themselves. These are all perfectly healthy and laudable feelings.
At the same time, we have to make sure we’re not puffing up their ego with our endless praise and our very natural bias towards their virtues and blindness to their vices. Seneca knew this balance was not easy—it isn’t for any parent. It’s hard for grandparents and uncles too. But if our goal is to raise well-adjusted, self-aware kids, we’ll have to work for it. Even if our instinct is to rush over and tell them they’re the greatest, most special-est little kiddo there ever was.
As Seneca writes in his essay, Of Anger, this requires speaking honestly—with kindness—and holding them accountable for their actions. Even if that pains us. He explains:
Flattery, then, must be kept well out of the way of children. Let a child hear the truth, and sometimes fear it: let him always reverence it. Let him rise in the presence of his elders. Let him obtain nothing by flying into a passion: let him be given when he is quiet what was refused him when he cried for it: let him behold, but not make use of his father's wealth: let him be reproved for what he does wrong. It will be advantageous to furnish boys with even-tempered teachers and paedagogi: what is soft and unformed clings to what is near, and takes its shape: the habits of young men reproduce those of their nurses and paedagogi.
Seneca knew what he was talking about because he saw Nero’s mother do the opposite. She indulged his every whim. She cleared every obstacle out of his path. She made him think he was infallible and invincible. By the time she brought in an even-tempered teacher like Seneca around to be a good influence, it was too late. She had ruined her son. And he in turn ruined himself and nearly ruined Rome.