Statisticabout Children’s Welfare in U.S.

Here are the statistics I referred to in my January newsletter that reflect the emotional-social welfare of children in the United States. These are from the web site of the Children’s Defense Fund, founded by Marian Wright Edelman. As you review them, look for the interaction of all these statistics together and what they say about the emotional wholeness of children and the factors that affect it.

Moments in America for Children
May 2007
·    Every second a public school student is suspended.*
·    Every 11 seconds a high school student drops out.*
·    Every 15 seconds a public school student is corporally punished.*
·    Every 20 seconds a child is arrested.
·    Every 22 seconds a baby is born to an unmarried mother.
·    Every 35 seconds a baby is born to a mother who is not a high school graduate.
·    Every 36 seconds a baby is born into poverty.
·    Every 36 seconds a child is confirmed as abused or neglected.
·    Every 47 seconds a baby is born without health insurance.
·    Every minute a baby is born to a teen mother.
·    Every 2 minutes a baby is born at low birthweight.
·    Every 4 minutes a child is arrested for drug abuse.
·    Every 8 minutes a child is arrested for violent crimes.
·    Every 19 minutes a baby dies before his first birthday.
·    Every 3 hours a child or teen is killed by a firearm.
·    Every 4 hours a child or teen commits suicide.
·    Every 6 hours a child is killed by abuse or neglect.
·    Every 18 hours a mother dies in childbirth.

Each Day in America
May 2007
·    1 mother dies in childbirth.
·    4 children are killed by abuse or neglect.
·    5 children or teens commit suicide.
·    8 children or teens are killed by firearms.
·    33 children or teens die from accidents.
·    77 babies die before their first birthdays.
·    192 children are arrested for violent crimes.
·    383 children are arrested for drug abuse.
·    906 babies are born at low birthweight.
·    1,153 babies are born to teen mothers.
·    1,672 public school students are corporally punished.*
·    1,839 babies are born without health insurance.
·    2,261 high school students drop out.*
·    2,383 children are confirmed as abused or neglected.
·    2,411 babies are born into poverty.
·    2,494 babies are born to mothers who are not high school graduates.
·    4,017 babies are born to unmarried mothers.
·    4,302 children are arrested.
·    17,132 public school students are suspended.*

What’s Wrong with Children Today?

We seldom want to look at the statistics about suicide in children
and young people, but they are important to consider. As parents
and educators we tend to ignore this subject, pretending it doesn’t
happen in "good" families. The belief is that suicide happens only
in troubled families to troubled children.

At the ChildSpirit Conference I attended in November, Joseph
Chilton Pearce, author of numerous books including The Magical
Child, gave us a startling statistic. "Suicide is the third leading
cause of death among children and young people".
This number
includes only the young people who succeed, not those who attempt
and live.

He said this is unprecedented in the history of humankind. Never
before have we witnessed children ending their own life in such
numbers. (Additional figures from the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry: Suicide is the third leading cause of death
for 15-to-24-year-olds, and the sixth leading cause of death for
5-to-14-year-olds.)

These are shocking statistics! They cry out for us to wake and to
pay attention. Most of us never think of children ages 5 – 14
committing suicide.

Child and youth suicide is important because it is the tip of the
iceberg
. What lies beneath the water’s surface are all the other
expressions of emotional dis-ease in children. These include ADD,
teen’s dropping out of school, over-weight children, depression,
anxiety, excessive time watching TV and playing video games,
defiance, tantrums and emotional upsets, and repetitive conflicts
with others.

The fact that suicide rates in young people are higher than they
have ever been in the human history indicates the pervasiveness of
the problem. It demands our attention, not because your child will
commit suicide some day, but because your child is being raised in
the same emotional cultural stew
. You don’t want your child or
students to be another statistic of emotional discomfort.

In the last two months, I heard about the suicides of two men in
their early twenties that shocked their families and those who knew
them. Both men were highly successful and were leaders in their
field. To everyone around them, they appeared happy and to be
living full lives. Yet something was seriously wrong with their
internal experience of themselves and of life.

Reason tells us, suicide is not something that is done lightly and
for insignificant reasons. It is an act of desperation, of seeing
no other way. It is the ultimate expression of profound loss,
futility, failure, powerlessness, hopelessness, or anger.

Our culture tends to ignore emotional pain and discomfort. We ask
children to suppress their unhappy feelings and then place extreme
pressures on them to succeed and to meet society’s and our
standards.
We ask them to be someone other than who they are, and
then wonder why they do irrational, hurtful things.

We all love and enjoy the innocence and tenderness of young
children. We want them to keep it forever. This innocence and
tenderness is based on their emotional sensitivity, their
connection with their feelings and their awareness of the feelings
of others.

Acts of suicide and violence in children are cries for us to wake
up as individuals and as a society. What’s wrong with children
today? Nothing. Children are as loving, brilliant, and  joyous as
ever.

What’s wrong with children are their relationships with important
adults in their lives, their relationship with themselves,
traditional models of education and the emotional environment in
which they are being raised. When we ignore a child’s emotional
wholeness, we do it at our peril. The cost of ignoring emotional
wholeness in children and in one’s self is high.

In order for young people to flourish emotionally, they need
several things.
They need safe relationships where they can be who
they are and where they can honestly talk about their needs,
desires and feelings. They need internal strategies to handle the
emotionally painful times. They need people who believe in them
always. They need a strong, positive ground of being within
themselves.

How can you give this to your child and to your students? Begin
today to pay attention to the emotional wholeness of your child.
Gain understanding and develop approaches that nurture his positive
experience of himself and of life. Give him the nurturing and tools
he needs for a joyous, fulfilling life.

This is why I created my Parenting with Joy Training and why I do
the work I do. Your child’s emotional wholeness is the foundation
for her life.
When her emotional wholeness is strong and clear, she
can accomplish so much and be fulfilled and happy as a person. This
is the most important gift you can give your child and your students.

You lay an emotional foundation for your child, whether you are
aware of it or not. Every interaction with your child and every
experience she has in life creates the emotional environment in
which she develops. These experiences help her build strong
emotional resources or they weaken her internal resilience and
ability to flourish. This is true whether your child is six weeks,
6 years or 16 years old.

Commit today to making your child’s emotional wholeness a priority.
Then watch what new things you discover and what experiences occur
in your child’s life and in your own.

What Makes your Child Happy?

Every parent wants their child to be happy. Every educator wants their students to love learning. In fact, it is one of the driving desires that affects the choices parents make regarding their child. Yet, how much do you know about what makes your child and students deeply happy and content?

At this time of year, we act as if the secret to happiness is material possessions for both our children and ourselves. We buy toys and designer clothes on their wish list, only to find them tossed aside tomorrow or strung out over their bedroom floor.

Other times parents and educators act as if saying nice, encouraging things paves the road to happiness for children. Parents often put a lot of energy and effort into saying the "right" things to keep their child happy.

Other times we act as if we believe activity is the key to happiness and joy for our children. We drive them to classes and play dates, without really noticing if our child is happy or not.

You may think your child is happy even though she is struggling inside emotionally. What I’ve found is that our society we don’t know a lot about emotional wellness. Consequently, you may miss the clues your child gives you about how she really feels inside. Children pretend to be happy and smile even when that is not what they are feeling.

Your child’s happiness doesn’t depend on material possessions, kind words from others, or specific activities. His happiness comes from feeling certain and clear in who he is and making choices that reflect his personal integrity.

Happiness comes from knowing that she belongs, that she is deeply loved by the important people in her life. It comes from knowing she is respected and valued for who she is. In other words, your child’s happiness depends on his emotional wholeness.

This is why in all my work we focus exclusively on how to nurture emotional wholeness in your child. Children need love and respect from themselves more than they need love and respect from us. Happiness comes from inner love and respect.

Love Joyously!

So what’s a parent or educator to do?

Make your child’s emotional wholeness one of your highest priorities. Emotional well-being is more important than managing her behavior and making sure she’s doing the right things. It’s emotional well-being that lays the foundation for the great behavior and the wise choices.

When you nurture your child’s emotional wholeness, he glows with joy and a feeling of certainty that is unmistakable to people around him. When you nurture your child’s emotional wholeness, power struggles, tantrums, defiance, depression, anxiety, and a host of other behavioral challenges become things of the past.

When your child lives in a place of her emotional well-being, he flourishes and shines brightly. He radiates beauty, joy, and love from the inside out. This is where it counts!

Are your thoughts, words and actions consistent with the feelings you want to create?

A Dad’s Response

My Parenting Tip last month was “Take care of yourself first.” Here is a a dad’s response.

"A great and timely tip.  I often struggle with guilty feelings over spending time doing what I want and need over what my two boys want to do.  Sports are a good example.  We have been allowing them to play one sport (traditionally it’s been soccer, but it’s their choice) a year and it runs from August through November. 

"Now, my oldest wants to play Lacrosse, which runs from January through May, because a friend of his is playing.  My first impulse is to say no.  Spring is the time that I start hiking on the weekends and we go on family camping trips. – the last thing I want to be doing is spending another five months of weekends going to Lacrosse meets.  When I mention my dilemma to other parents they look at you like you have two heads and it seems that they have no life beyond taking their kids to sports all the time.

"As a dad I want my kids to be able to experience many different things so part of me feels selfish for wanting to spend time on myself at the expense of taking them to another game. 

"So, thanks for your, “Take Care of Yourself First” email.  Your words helped to reassure me that I’m on the right path."—Kevin

My Response—Kevin, thank you for sharing your experience with me. I celebrate your courage and clarity in listening to yourself. There are many excellent advantages to your choice regarding your boys’ participation in sports.

First, you’ve given your sons a choice of the sport they want to play, and you support them in that with your time, attention, energy, and money. Then you’ve created a win-win that include both their needs and yours.

It is never good for you as a parent to give in to your boys’ demands or desires when it doesn’t feel good to you. They need your clarity, courage and strength to learn how to be clear, courageous, strong men.

Second, they gain much from sharing your loves and interests with you. It broadens their perspective and deepens their life experiences. Plus they get to know you as a person.

Third, young people today participate in many activities each week. Some of these are activities they love, some they do because their friend loves it, and some because their parents want them to do it.

I believe many young people participate in too many activities, more than what is good for their emotional, spiritual well-being. They become little “do-machines”, much like their parents who run them around to all of their activities.

When parents and children run around doing so many things, they lose their ability to feel their feelings. They spend most of their awareness in their mind, thinking about all of the things they need to do next. This creates a cultural phenomenon, by which we often suppress our emotions when we cover them up with continuous activity.

Finally, taking your boys on hikes and camping is one of the best gifts you can give them to help them find emotional and spiritual balance. Richard Louv recently wrote an excellent book about nature’s importance in your child’s life “Last Child in the Woods.” You can read more about this book in my August 9 post to this blog and you can purchase the book in the column to the left.

What do you think
about this?
Tell us
what you think by clicking "Comment" below. I’d love to hear about your experience and
to get a lively discussion going about this topic.

Different Perspectives

My husband Doug and I love reading books together–I read, he listens. One of our favorite authors is Jennifer Fallon and her science fiction novels based in the land of Hythria.  Her first book is Medalon, followed by Treason Keep and Harshini.

WE LOVE HER BOOKS!! Her storytelling and character development are brilliant. Doug and I are reading book 2 Warrior in her second trilogy about Hythria. We came across the following reflections of a mother and a warlord from another province that clearly demonstrates the power of perception. Here it is…

"Along with all the other reasons Marla wanted to strangle her children at the moment, she was furious at her sons fur pulling this prank while Rogan Bearbow was here to witness it.

" ‘I don’t know where I’ve gone wrong with Damin,’ she said, forcing a laugh she didn’t feel. ‘He’s not normally so … reckless.’

" ‘In reality, Marla had sent Damin to his room to avoid the temptation of strangling him with her bare hands herself. Doesn’t he know the danger? she asked herself, over and over. Haven’t I impressed upon him yet how easy it would be for an assassin to slip a blade between his ribs in a crowded market? Why does he delight in tormenting me like this?

"The warlord nodded sympathetically, ‘It’s dreadful, isn’t it? All that hard work, the tutors, the training…and all you’ve got for your trouble is a very resourceful boy, smart enough to give Krakandar’s finest warriors the slip. A boy who’s so loyal to his friends that he’d rather be punished himself than let the others take the blame for something he was involved in. I can see why you’re so upset with your miserable failure.’

The same behavior from a son, two radically different interpretations. Where can you change your perception of how you see your child or a student? This is true power.