How to Raise Successful Kids -- Without Over-Parenting | Julie Lythcott-Haims | TED

TED
4 Oct 201614:16

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Transcripts

play00:12

You know, I didn't set out to be a parenting expert.

play00:16

In fact, I'm not very interested in parenting, per Se.

play00:21

It's just that there's a certain style of parenting these days

play00:25

that is kind of messing up kids,

play00:28

impeding their chances to develop into theirselves.

play00:33

There's a certain style of parenting these days

play00:35

that's getting in the way.

play00:36

I guess what I'm saying is,

play00:38

we spend a lot of time being very concerned

play00:40

about parents who aren't involved enough in the lives of their kids

play00:44

and their education or their upbringing,

play00:46

and rightly so.

play00:48

But at the other end of the spectrum,

play00:50

there's a lot of harm going on there as well,

play00:53

where parents feel a kid can't be successful

play00:56

unless the parent is protecting and preventing at every turn

play01:00

and hovering over every happening, and micromanaging every moment,

play01:03

and steering their kid towards some small subset of colleges and careers.

play01:10

When we raise kids this way,

play01:13

and I'll say we,

play01:15

because Lord knows, in raising my two teenagers,

play01:17

I've had these tendencies myself,

play01:20

our kids end up leading a kind of checklisted childhood.

play01:25

And here's what the checklisted childhood looks like.

play01:27

We keep them safe and sound

play01:30

and fed and watered,

play01:33

and then we want to be sure they go to the right schools,

play01:36

that they're in the right classes at the right schools,

play01:38

and that they get the right grades in the right classes in the right schools.

play01:42

But not just the grades, the scores,

play01:44

and not just the grades and scores, but the accolades and the awards

play01:47

and the sports, the activities, the leadership.

play01:49

We tell our kids, don't just join a club,

play01:51

start a club, because colleges want to see that.

play01:53

And check the box for community service.

play01:55

I mean, show the colleges you care about others.

play01:58

(Laughter)

play02:00

And all of this is done to some hoped-for degree of perfection.

play02:05

We expect our kids to perform at a level of perfection

play02:07

we were never asked to perform at ourselves,

play02:11

and so because so much is required,

play02:13

we think,

play02:14

well then, of course we parents have to argue with every teacher

play02:17

and principal and coach and referee

play02:20

and act like our kid's concierge

play02:23

and personal handler

play02:25

and secretary.

play02:27

And then with our kids, our precious kids,

play02:29

we spend so much time nudging,

play02:32

cajoling, hinting, helping, haggling, nagging as the case may be,

play02:36

to be sure they're not screwing up,

play02:39

not closing doors,

play02:41

not ruining their future,

play02:44

some hoped-for admission

play02:46

to a tiny handful of colleges

play02:49

that deny almost every applicant.

play02:54

And here's what it feels like to be a kid in this checklisted childhood.

play03:00

First of all, there's no time for free play.

play03:02

There's no room in the afternoons,

play03:04

because everything has to be enriching, we think.

play03:07

It's as if every piece of homework, every quiz, every activity

play03:10

is a make-or-break moment for this future we have in mind for them,

play03:15

and we absolve them of helping out around the house,

play03:18

and we even absolve them of getting enough sleep

play03:21

as long as they're checking off the items on their checklist.

play03:26

And in the checklisted childhood, we say we just want them to be happy,

play03:30

but when they come home from school,

play03:32

what we ask about all too often first

play03:35

is their homework and their grades.

play03:38

And they see in our faces

play03:40

that our approval, that our love,

play03:43

that their very worth,

play03:45

comes from A's.

play03:46

And then we walk alongside them

play03:49

and offer clucking praise like a trainer at the Westminster Dog Show --

play03:54

(Laughter)

play03:55

coaxing them to just jump a little higher and soar a little farther,

play04:00

day after day after day.

play04:03

And when they get to high school,

play04:05

they don't say, "Well, what might I be interested in studying

play04:08

or doing as an activity?"

play04:09

They go to counselors and they say,

play04:11

"What do I need to do to get into the right college?"

play04:15

And then, when the grades start to roll in in high school,

play04:18

and they're getting some B's,

play04:19

or God forbid some C's,

play04:22

they frantically text their friends

play04:24

and say, "Has anyone ever gotten into the right college with these grades?"

play04:29

And our kids,

play04:31

regardless of where they end up at the end of high school,

play04:35

they're breathless.

play04:37

They're brittle.

play04:38

They're a little burned out.

play04:40

They're a little old before their time,

play04:42

wishing the grown-ups in their lives had said, "What you've done is enough,

play04:46

this effort you've put forth in childhood is enough."

play04:49

And they're withering now under high rates of anxiety and depression

play04:53

and some of them are wondering,

play04:55

will this life ever turn out to have been worth it?

play05:01

Well, we parents,

play05:03

we parents are pretty sure it's all worth it.

play05:06

We seem to behave --

play05:08

it's like we literally think they will have no future

play05:10

if they don't get into one of these tiny set of colleges or careers

play05:15

we have in mind for them.

play05:17

Or maybe, maybe, we're just afraid

play05:21

they won't have a future we can brag about

play05:23

to our friends and with stickers on the backs of our cars.

play05:29

Yeah.

play05:30

(Applause)

play05:36

But if you look at what we've done,

play05:39

if you have the courage to really look at it,

play05:43

you'll see that not only do our kids think their worth comes

play05:46

from grades and scores,

play05:47

but that when we live right up inside their precious developing minds

play05:51

all the time, like our very own version of the movie "Being John Malkovich,"

play05:56

we send our children the message:

play05:58

"Hey kid, I don't think you can actually achieve any of this without me."

play06:03

And so with our overhelp,

play06:06

our overprotection and overdirection and hand-holding,

play06:08

we deprive our kids of the chance to build self-efficacy,

play06:12

which is a really fundamental tenet of the human psyche,

play06:16

far more important than that self-esteem they get

play06:19

every time we applaud.

play06:21

Self-efficacy is built when one sees that one's own actions lead to outcomes,

play06:27

not --

play06:28

There you go.

play06:29

(Applause)

play06:33

Not one's parents' actions on one's behalf,

play06:37

but when one's own actions lead to outcomes.

play06:40

So simply put,

play06:41

if our children are to develop self-efficacy, and they must,

play06:47

then they have to do a whole lot more of the thinking, planning, deciding,

play06:51

doing, hoping, coping, trial and error,

play06:55

dreaming and experiencing of life

play06:58

for themselves.

play07:01

Now, am I saying

play07:03

every kid is hard-working and motivated

play07:06

and doesn't need a parent's involvement or interest in their lives,

play07:09

and we should just back off and let go?

play07:12

Hell no.

play07:13

(Laughter)

play07:14

That is not what I'm saying.

play07:16

What I'm saying is, when we treat grades and scores and accolades and awards

play07:19

as the purpose of childhood,

play07:22

all in furtherance of some hoped-for admission to a tiny number of colleges

play07:25

or entrance to a small number of careers,

play07:28

that that's too narrow a definition of success for our kids.

play07:33

And even though we might help them achieve some short-term wins

play07:36

by overhelping --

play07:38

like they get a better grade if we help them do their homework,

play07:42

they might end up with a longer childhood résumé when we help --

play07:47

what I'm saying is that all of this comes at a long-term cost

play07:50

to their sense of self.

play07:52

What I'm saying is, we should be less concerned

play07:55

with the specific set of colleges

play07:56

they might be able to apply to or might get into

play08:00

and far more concerned that they have the habits, the mindset, the skill set,

play08:05

the wellness, to be successful wherever they go.

play08:10

What I'm saying is,

play08:11

our kids need us to be a little less obsessed with grades and scores

play08:15

and a whole lot more interested

play08:18

in childhood providing a foundation for their success

play08:23

built on things like love

play08:27

and chores.

play08:28

(Laughter)

play08:30

(Applause)

play08:35

Did I just say chores? Did I just say chores? I really did.

play08:39

But really, here's why.

play08:43

The longest longitudinal study of humans ever conducted

play08:46

is called the Harvard Grant Study.

play08:49

It found that professional success in life,

play08:51

which is what we want for our kids,

play08:54

that professional success in life comes from having done chores as a kid,

play08:57

and the earlier you started, the better,

play08:59

that a roll-up-your-sleeves- and-pitch-in mindset,

play09:02

a mindset that says, there's some unpleasant work,

play09:04

someone's got to do it, it might as well be me,

play09:07

a mindset that says,

play09:08

I will contribute my effort to the betterment of the whole,

play09:11

that that's what gets you ahead in the workplace.

play09:14

Now, we all know this. You know this.

play09:17

(Applause)

play09:20

We all know this, and yet, in the checklisted childhood,

play09:23

we absolve our kids of doing the work of chores around the house,

play09:27

and then they end up as young adults in the workplace

play09:30

still waiting for a checklist,

play09:32

but it doesn't exist,

play09:33

and more importantly, lacking the impulse, the instinct

play09:37

to roll up their sleeves and pitch in

play09:39

and look around and wonder, how can I be useful to my colleagues?

play09:43

How can I anticipate a few steps ahead to what my boss might need?

play09:48

A second very important finding from the Harvard Grant Study

play09:52

said that happiness in life

play09:55

comes from love,

play09:57

not love of work,

play09:59

love of humans:

play10:02

our spouse, our partner, our friends, our family.

play10:06

So childhood needs to teach our kids how to love,

play10:10

and they can't love others if they don't first love themselves,

play10:13

and they won't love themselves if we can't offer them unconditional love.

play10:17

(Applause)

play10:21

Right.

play10:24

And so,

play10:26

instead of being obsessed with grades and scores

play10:28

when our precious offspring come home from school,

play10:31

or we come home from work,

play10:32

we need to close our technology, put away our phones,

play10:35

and look them in the eye

play10:36

and let them see the joy that fills our faces

play10:40

when we see our child for the first time in a few hours.

play10:43

And then we have to say,

play10:45

"How was your day?

play10:47

What did you like about today?"

play10:50

And when your teenage daughter says, "Lunch," like mine did,

play10:54

and I want to hear about the math test,

play10:56

not lunch,

play10:57

you have to still take an interest in lunch.

play11:01

You gotta say, "What was great about lunch today?"

play11:04

They need to know they matter to us as humans,

play11:07

not because of their GPA.

play11:11

All right, so you're thinking, chores and love,

play11:13

that sounds all well and good, but give me a break.

play11:16

The colleges want to see top scores and grades

play11:19

and accolades and awards, and I'm going to tell you, sort of.

play11:25

The very biggest brand-name schools are asking that of our young adults,

play11:31

but here's the good news.

play11:33

Contrary to what the college rankings racket would have us believe --

play11:38

(Applause)

play11:44

you don't have to go to one of the biggest brand name schools

play11:46

to be happy and successful in life.

play11:48

Happy and successful people went to state school,

play11:51

went to a small college no one has heard of,

play11:53

went to community college,

play11:55

went to a college over here and flunked out.

play11:58

(Applause)

play12:05

The evidence is in this room, is in our communities,

play12:08

that this is the truth.

play12:09

And if we could widen our blinders

play12:11

and be willing to look at a few more colleges,

play12:13

maybe remove our own egos from the equation,

play12:17

we could accept and embrace this truth and then realize,

play12:21

it is hardly the end of the world

play12:23

if our kids don't go to one of those big brand-name schools.

play12:27

And more importantly,

play12:29

if their childhood has not been lived according to a tyrannical checklist

play12:34

then when they get to college,

play12:36

whichever one it is,

play12:38

well, they'll have gone there on their own volition,

play12:41

fueled by their own desire,

play12:44

capable and ready to thrive there.

play12:49

I have to admit something to you.

play12:51

I've got two kids I mentioned, Sawyer and Avery.

play12:54

They're teenagers.

play12:56

And once upon a time,

play12:58

I think I was treating my Sawyer and Avery

play13:01

like little bonsai trees --

play13:02

(Laughter)

play13:05

that I was going to carefully clip and prune

play13:08

and shape into some perfect form of a human

play13:12

that might just be perfect enough to warrant them admission

play13:15

to one of the most highly selective colleges.

play13:19

But I've come to realize, after working with thousands of other people's kids --

play13:23

(Laughter)

play13:26

and raising two kids of my own,

play13:30

my kids aren't bonsai trees.

play13:33

They're wildflowers

play13:36

of an unknown genus and species --

play13:39

(Laughter)

play13:41

and it's my job to provide a nourishing environment,

play13:44

to strengthen them through chores

play13:47

and to love them so they can love others and receive love

play13:51

and the college, the major, the career,

play13:54

that's up to them.

play13:56

My job is not to make them become what I would have them become,

play14:01

but to support them in becoming their glorious selves.

play14:07

Thank you.

play14:08

(Applause)

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