Raising Human Beings: Creating a
Collaborative Partnership with Your Child. By Ross W. Greene, Ph.D.
Scribner. $26.
In the sweetness and light
of a fully rational and emotionally balanced world, parents with an infinite amount
of time and no stressors outside the home will joyously affirm and implement
child psychologist Ross W. Greene’s inspirational child-rearing model,
Collaborative & Proactive Solutions. Practicality and Pollyanna-ism are at
constant war in this extremely well-meaning, very well-written handbook, in
which Greene tries to reorient child-rearing for an increasingly collaborative
and interconnected future. His basic approach is to simplify methods of raising
kids into Plan A, Plan B and Plan C. The first, the traditional method,
involves parents’ unilateral imposition
of solutions, and is the one against which Greene has set up Plan B –
which is the idea that all people, including children, want to do well and will
do well if they are able to and are given the chance. Plan C is not a middle
ground but a holding back, the temporary avoidance of an unsolved problem until
a better time, and the decision to see whether a child can handle it on his or
her own; the problem, if and when it must be dealt with later, is then managed
using Plan B.
Like economists assuming
that all economic decisions are inherently rational, Greene assumes that all
parent-child interactions inherently involve understanding, mutual respect and
a joint desire to do what is best. Communication, constant and at length, is
the core of Greene’s Plan B, whose three steps involve empathy, defining adult
concerns, and capital-I Invitation, which means mutually agreeing “on a
solution that (a) is realistic,
meaning both parties can actually do what they’re agreeing to do, and (b) will
address the concerns of both
parties.” The foundational argument here is that such solutions can always be
found.
Beware of “always.” Greene
cogently and intelligently argues that parents should not react to a child’s
poor behavior as if it is a problem, because it is in fact a reaction to a
problem that parents and children must identify and solve together. This is
often true, but not always true. He
argues that children, even ones as young as, say, five, can understand
collaborative problem-solving and can, when exposed to it, use it beneficially
so that they eventually grow into the sorts of human beings parents want them
to become. This is often true, but again, not always true. The simple reality is that some adult concerns –
notably ones involving safety, a word that does not even appear in this book’s
index – are not matters for collaborative, cooperative problem solving, which
in fact would abrogate parents’ underlying need to care for children until they
are able to care for themselves.
Greene presents lots of
real-life situations and narratives to support his Plan B approach, and his
question-and-answer segments, of which there are many, will be very valuable
when things progress in real life as he predicts that they will. They often
will, but not always. There is so
much reasonableness here: “Remember, unsolved problems are shared by you and
your kid. Your energy, effort, and persistence alone won’t solve them. You
still need your partner.” That is really what Raising Human Beings is all about: the notion of children as partners in a family. Readers who can
accept that concept will find a wealth of implementation assistance here. Those
who cannot – well, Greene is not always helpful in answering some of the many
questions he sprinkles throughout the book. He has a tendency to bend words and
evade direct responses. Take the matter of actions having consequences, for
example. He provides the question, “So adult-imposed consequences are out of
the parenting mix completely?” This invites a “yes,” “no,” or “yes, in one
sense, but no, in another,” response. What Greene does, however, is say, “The
big question is whether you really need
adult-imposed consequences.” A bit later, he moves on to, “Don’t you think it’s
important for kids to be held accountable and to take responsibility for their
actions?” Again, “yes, but not in the traditional sense of accountability,” or
something along those lines, would be a reasonable thing to say. Instead,
Greene writes, “Too often, the phrases hold
the child accountable and make him
take responsibility are really codes for punishment.” Parents who read Greene’s many responses along these
lines may be forgiven for wanting to say, “Doggone, answer the question
already!”
At least one hopes parents may be forgiven. There is
not much forgiveness in Greene’s formulation for parents who may fall short of
the ultra-reasonableness that lies at the core of Plan B. “Maintaining your
perspective is crucial to keeping your anxiety under control,” Greene writes,
which means that parents having anxiety in trying to handle their children
under Plan B are suffering from a failure of perspective. Again and again,
Greene indicates that parents who do not follow Plan B are heading for trouble of their own making, since the basis of
Plan B is the notion that children are inherently rational and desirous of
doing well: “Kids do well if they can –
if your kid could do well, he would do well, because doing well is preferable”
(italics in the original). Measuring up to Greene’s ultra-rational
child-rearing method will be a tall order for many parents, especially ones who
head single-parent households, work two jobs to keep food on the table, work
long hours under stressful conditions, have adult-to-adult difficulties with
partners or work colleagues or other family members, or simply have significant
time limitations that make the no-shortcuts approach to every parent-child
interaction impossible or, at best, extremely difficult (and, yes,
stress-provoking and anxiety-producing). Greene’s Plan B is an admirable
concept and an enormously worthy goal, and his attempt to provide specific
implementation advice in Raising Human
Beings is equally admirable. But there is something utopian about the
notion of adults using Plan B throughout the child-rearing years. Just as “Homo
Economicus” allegedly has an infinite ability to make rational economic
decisions, so Greene’s Plan B parents have infinite patience, time and verbal
ability for rational family discussions and decisions. A goal of using Plan B, at least to the extent possible, is a very
worthy one. An expectation of using
it is a recipe for parental self-doubt and fear of falling far short of the
“right” way to raise kids.
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