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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

What Type of Parent Are You?



When you find out your having a baby you might not think about what kind of parent you want to be.  Or if you’re like me then you thought about it constantly.  I thought I knew exactly what kind of parent I wanted to be.  I was going to strong but loving.  I would put my foot down and put rules down for my daughter to follow.  I would never spank her.  I would never lose my patience.  This list could go on and on.  I read book after book about parenting.

Now I have my daughter and I’m learning something very important.  A lot of the parenting is something you do as you go.  I was scared to death for the first 6 months of her life.  I felt the need to do everything by the book and anything my doctor said was like the word from god.  Then I started to loosen up some.  I stopped reading every baby book I could get my hands on.  I stopped sanitizing everything my daughter might touch.  Around 1 year, I stopped making schedules for her.

I’m still learning.  She’s almost 2 now and I have spanked her on occasion.  Although I’m perfecting timeouts now (thanks to some advice from friends) and I think its working.  I thought I had planned out what kind of parent I wanted to be as she got bigger, but now I really think I’ll just play it by ear.
Like in school, I think there is a test to see what type of parent you were and how well you did.  How your kids turned out.  That’s the final test.  So here’s a breakdown of where I learned my parenting style that I’d like to have and the results of said children.

What type of parent do I want to be?  I want to be a mix of my Aunt Mary, Uncle Max and Tom’s dad. 
Aunt Mary and her daughter, my cousin, Sam have an amazing relationship.  Sam is in her 20’s now and they are very close.  Sam was always a driven youngster.  She was popular, made friends easy, was in lots of school activities and still help a part time job.  She stayed out of trouble for the most part.  The most important thing here is that I want the relationship that they have.  For a single mom Aunt Mary couldn’t have done better.

Uncle Max was a disciplinary.  He didn’t know how to talk to us or hang out with us.  He was not our friend.  But I want to be able to discipline my children.  Not quite as harshly as he did, but I want to be able to create the fear that he did.  You were good because he scared you into it.  His test?  My cousin Missy is great young lady.  She stayed out of trouble, is married with an education and has her own home.  I’m so proud of her, and I had no hand in it.

Last is Tom’s dad.  He was also a single parent, the only single father with full custody that I’ve ever known.  He and Tom have a great relationship.  They talk on the phone all of the time.  Tom turned out great.  He did a great job.  Tom has an education, goals, is married and has a great daughter (after all she’s mine too).  I May be biased in this one.

I could only dream of being half the parent Aunt Mary and Tom’s dad are.  Then mix a little Uncle Max in there and I’m good.  But, you never know.  I may not be that kind of parent.  A parent should base their style off of their child.  In fact you may need to handle your kids differently, because no kids are alike.  

What type of parent do you want to be?  Where do think you go that from?

Just for fun I took some parenting Quiz’s

Here’s the first one from about.com.  It’s really for baby stuff.  Here’s what I got:

You answered 8 items out of 10 Yes.
Your score is 80%. Your parenting style is most closely aligned with attachment parenting philosophies.

My response – Attached parenting?  Wow am I surprised, lol.  I actually never considered myself an attached parent.

Here’s the other one I took, it’s from parenting.com.  This one a lot more in depth and you can take it for your partner too.  Sadly it’s one of those sites you have to register for to get your results, but I liked this one a lot.  I’ll just go in later and take myself off their mailing list.  My results:

Involved but Flexible - While you believe it's important to set expectations for your children, you're not too rigid about it. You recognize that sometimes they may deviate from your considered instruction to follow their own path, and that's okay. When it comes to modeling behavior for your children, you take it very seriously, but you also recognize and appreciate outside influences that may shape their behavior; they'll learn from situations and people they encounter in the world - the inspiring scout leader, the beloved Sunday School teacher, even the flaky neighbor or annoying kid up the street. Overall, you want your kids to learn the best lessons they can, whether those come straight from you and your spouse, or another source.

My Response - Neat.  That just described the exact kind of parent I want to be!

1 comment:

  1. I got 3 results for the 2nd one. I didn't take the first one since I know I'm an attachment parent.

    I didn't really think a lot about parenting style beforehand - I just kind of fell into how we parent Emily which turned out to be very attached.

    For us, time outs are much, much more effective than spanking. She doesn't really care about spankings but being put in time out is like the END OF THE WORLD - she's a little drama queen sometimes.

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