Are You Strict Enough?
By TheMommyhood, Saturday, January 22, 2011, 1 commentsWhat kind of mom are you – strict, laid back? How do you define successful kids? I’ve been stewing on these questions the last week or so after reading all the hype surrounding Amy Chua’s Battle Hymn of a Tiger Mother. If you aren’t familiar with it, former Yale Law Professor Amy Chua has written a memoir about her experience using a very strict traditional Chinese approach to raise her two successful daughters. And she believes this parenting style is superior to the more "laid back" Western approach to parenting.
I must confess I have not yet read the book, but I want to. Particularly after seeingWaiting for Superman.
I know the news articles have taken parts of the book out of context. Sorry about that, Amy, but I’m going to do it, too.
Some highlights from Ms. Chua’s parenting style:
- No play dates, no sleepovers, and mandatory piano and violin lessons.
- She also threatened to put her then three-year-old daughter out in the cold for being disobedient.
- Additionally, she once rejected a home-made birthday card, demanding a better one.
Chua demanded excellence from her daughters and got it, even if it meant she was sometimes very harsh. While she has some regrets (what mother doesn’t?), she is mostly satisfied with how she raised her girls. Is she wrong to demand excellence? Call me Western, but I think there is a difference in encouraging excellence and demanding it.
So, I’ve been thinking about my motherhood style and what it means to raise a successful child. For me, Harvard is not the goal. That said, I would be over the MOON if one or both of my kids went after and got an Ivy League education. But that’s not how I define success for my children.
Here’s what I want for my kids:
- I want them to be happy and self-assured;
- I want them to be resourceful and self-sufficient; and,
- last but certainly not least, I want them to have integrity and be kind to others.
And for that, Harvard (or Julliard) is not required.
Well, that’s what I think. What do you think? What does raising successful kids mean to you? Are you strict or laid back, and is that working for you?



















1 Comments
My kids' "playdates" and
My kids' "playdates" and sleep-overs have gone down to a great big zero- simply because their (and my) lives are so busy. Monday- art school, Tuesday and Thursday - basketball, Friday - football, Saturday - football and basketball games, and Sunday - church and family. I also give the older one piano lessons during the week and volunteer in the little one's classroom and work full time as a professor, with at least two 15 hour days away from home. I think Americans are swamped. I have no idea how my husband and I could do this without flexible professions. I think Chua has some good points- excellence is what we try to model and encourage for our children. As black males, they are facing a world that will likely expect far less from them, or far more, and they will be fighting against stereotypes. That's a given. Our children know that if you are going to do something, give everything and strive for excellence. It's gone well so far! We're probably on the "extreme" end of parenting, but they are happy, high-achieving kids, so I would like to think we're doing something right.
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