Return to Articles Index Raising Happy Diabetic Kids
Part II
Published:
2-Jan-2005
Help Your
Child Develop Self-Reliance
By Russell Turner
This is the second article in a series I am writing about how to raise
happy diabetic children. You can find the first article titled Help
Your Child Develop Self-Confidence in our article
archives.
Sometimes the phrase "happy diabetic kids" seems to be an oxymoron. Often
it seems all of the dark powers of the diabetes universe are aligned against
you. You wonder if there isn't some evil house elf behind the scenes just
making everyone's life miserable on purpose. Not being graduates of Hogwarts
School Of Magic we can't just wave a magic wand and make it all better. We
must prepare for life with diabetes and we must prepare our children.
Self-Reliance
is a critical skill for diabetic children to master. Think of all of the
responsibilities that go into daily diabetes care. We all realize that we
must keep the responsibilities we put upon our children age appropriate.
Nonetheless, in most school aged children the ability to take some responsibility
for their own care goes a long way in giving them some feelings of control
over their diabetes.
Last month I mentioned there are three components
to raising happy children. Self-Confidence, Self-Reliance and Self-Control.
No I still haven't forgotten Self-Esteem we'll get there. I'm still of
the opinion that with these first three components your child can't help
but Develop Self-Esteem.
What is Self-Reliance?
Self-Reliance is the ability to manage on your own: to know how to manage
your time, to function and think independently, combined with the ability
to solve problems. With self-reliance, there is no need for other people's
approval before moving forward or doing something new. It's also unnecessary
for constant guidance on how to achieve a goal. you can rely on yourself.
Self-reliance is about tasks and skills -- knowing how to do things, how
to achieve things or how to manage things. It also includes the ability to
be alone and to think things through on your own.
Self-reliance is broader than
self-confidence. Self-confidence relates to what we can do, to specific skills.
Self-reliance is about being independent, creative and self-sufficient; having
confidence in our innerselves to enable us to adapt and manage on our own.
Self-Reliance helps us become:
Self-reliance is also having confidence in your own ideas. It is about
being able to see things through to completion. It is about not being afraid
of setting goals, and not being stopped by fear of failure. There is a common
belief that the world is made up of three different types of people:
- those who make things happen;
- those who watch things happen;
- those who notice nothing until after then ask, "What happened?"
Those who have good self-reliance (and self-confidence, and self-control)
Develop self-esteem and make things happen. If we want our children to be
able to make things happen, we don't have to think on a grand scale. It
doesn't mean we all should want our children to be like Bill Gates, or Nobel
Prize winners. We don't need to have our children achieve on a scale that
makes a difference to others, We should aim to give our children a measure
of self-reliance that allows them to keep better control of their own lives
and keep choices open for them.
Self-Reliant at What?
We can encourage self-reliance in our children from a fairly early age.
As soon as your child shows they can manage things for themselves, however
slowly or clumsily, we should allow them to do so. Self-reliance is best
introduced and experienced stage by stage, starting early and building up
slowly as they become more more competent and responsible.
When children
are very young they have this almost unstoppable drive to become independent.
Before they learn adult concepts of failure, they are willing to try over
and over until they master whatever they are trying to do. This is especially
true if they have older brothers or sisters. They desperately want to do
what the older kids can do. If we stand in the way of letting them try
or show disapproval when they don't do it quite right we can damage their
belief in themselves. The more we do for them the more we prevent them from
developing the ability to make judgments and decisions for themselves.
The
stages of self-reliance are fun to watch. The first time your baby grabs
a hand full of baby food and finds their own mouth with it. When they learn
to "go potty" all
by themselves. When they put their own shirt on, usually backwards after
wrestling with it for ten minutes. When they pick up their own room. When
they start to earn an allowance. When they do their homework without you
holding a gun to their head. When they go off on their first baby-sitting
job. When they show you their first apartment, where you should promptly
go through it turning on and leaving on every light in the place, leave the
refrigerator door open and put your feet up on their new furniture. These
stages progress until they present you one day with a grandchild.
Clearly
you cannot encourage self-reliance in your child if you are not prepared
to stand back and progressively let go. Doing that in the right amounts
and at the right times is hard to judge. Add the dangers of their not managing
daily diabetes treatment into it and you realize just how careful you
need to be. Giving them responsibility and independence depends on the age
and personality of your child and on your own particular circumstances.
Children
can become self-reliant only if we have encouraged their independence,
given them practice in making decisions that concern themselves and their
health, and shown them that they can be relied upon.
We have been given a special task, raising a diabetic child. This makes
us special people. If we weren't up to it we wouldn't have been entrusted
with it. Self-reliance is a critical part of raising any child, diabetic
or not. Diabetes just makes it more difficult and more important we help
our children Develop this skill.
Next month I'll talk about Self-Control.
|