As a part of good parenting, we need to inculcate the right values in our children, else they can grow up to be manipulative children, using our weaknesses for their own benefit.
A colleague of mine introduced me to his son who had got admission a year ago into one of the prestigious old IITs.This colleague had been happiest the day his son cleared this exam. We all knew that his son was extremely bright and made it to a high rank in his first attempt.
I met the son and asked him how he was liking his new life. “Cool,” he replied. His disinterest was palpable. “He has just finished his second semester”, the proud dad informed and I smiled.
“Dad, Can I leave?” the lad almost roared. “He needs the car, so he came to drop me”, explained the father sheepishly. “Keys”, the son had almost lost his patience. “He seems to be in a hurry”. I tried to help the father. “Sorry, here are the keys”, the father handed over the keys to the son who turned and stormed out.
Generally, excited to meet this young generation and appreciate the exchange of thoughts. This chance meeting left a bad aftertaste. I felt sad for the boy who thought that his academic achievements made him so special that politeness or courtesy could wait. Moreover, felt angry at the father who discounted his obnoxious attitude, blinded by his academic achievement.
The father was almost apologetic while handing over the car keys. He seemed to be fine with the indifferent attitude of his bright, intelligent, and manipulative child.
Manipulative children learn to manipulate us when we give them a lopsided view of life. “Everything is good if you make it to IIT.” Your haughtiness becomes acceptable if you are an academic high flyer. Seriously?
A mother at the parent-teacher meeting was talking about her son. “He is such a perfectionist that he likes the best things. He loves cars and he comes back home from school in his favorite Audi. One day, I sent an Innova to pick him up and he was so upset.”
The son knows how to demand and get the most expensive stuff from brand-conscious parents.
Earlier, parents show that expensive products or exclusive experiences are what set them apart. Then children start using it to demand and get everything their hearts desire.
A friend of mine went through a long & bitter divorce. Her only son went through a traumatic phase. He appeared for his board exams after they moved out. My friend was busy with her job as well as increased household responsibilities. Whenever she tried to tell her son to study harder, he said, “I have gone through so much. Please don’t push me as I can’t handle it.”
The son could have studied harder, perform better but he started using his mother’s concern for him to shirk from hard work. Mother was scared that son might take some extreme step while she traveled and the son went to all coaching classes, spent a great deal of money, still culminating in a dismal performance.
Are Children Playing With Our Insecurities, Weaknesses, And Expectations?
Manipulative Children Use Us If We Transact With Them
“If you do this, I will do that” sets the wrong tone. This barter approach turns our relationship into a transaction. We need to give them a family vision with core values, fundamental duties, and rights as a family. Mutual respect, love, and gratitude can never be compromised. Therefore, clearly spelled foundations of life should be embedded in day-to-day conversations and actions. A grateful child will be grounded and empathetic while a manipulative child will get his way, anyway.
Manipulative Children Use Us When We Are Insecure
They make us feel guilty for not providing them everything that their friends might be getting. They make us feel inadequate when we don’t know about e-commerce or technological advances. Insecure parents get trapped in the web laid by their children. As such, parents agree to all the tantrums of their children out of perceived guilt or fear. They fear being termed as unworthy or uncool. They fear to lose their children and fail.
I have seen parents feeding their children, arranging their bags, making their beds, polishing their shoes when they are busy studying. Parents help with all their money to fund the child’s business or parents buy all the excuses of their children when they fail.
Aren’t they being taken for a ride?
Rather than feeling insecure, we need to be honest and confident as parents. It is our duty, to be honest with them about what we can do and what we can’t. We need to be happy with our position. If we are satisfied with our own stature and abstain from getting into comparison mode, our children will not see us as insecure.
When our children know that we feel insecure about our professional position or financial status or social standing, they either feel insecure and inferior themselves or start using it against us.
Be proud of who you are. Show them that you gave your best in your situation with dedication, discipline, and integrity. Show them that you have the courage and conviction to lead a life that you value. Don’t fear that your children will tune you out. Be fearless and raise confident children.
Manipulative Children Use Us When We Set Wrong Examples
I remember an aunt of mine who raised a beautiful family of two sons and two daughters. After her husband retired and both the daughters got married, the sons started quarreling. The elder one got posted out. Since the house belonged to the aunt and her husband, they stayed in the house with the younger son and his two children.
The son divided the house into two and the aunt lived and cooked separately. For more than two decades, they lived like strangers in the same house.
My aunt passed away fifteen years ago. Her grandchildren also got married around the same time. Unfortunately, the son lost his wife in an accident ten years ago and has been living alone in that huge house ever since. The children never cared. I assume that the father would have never asked for support and his children might have never thought about it because they grew up witnessing their parents as indifferent, uncaring children. The lonely life of this gentleman could have been different if he had made the right choices and set a better example while fulfilling his responsibility as a son and a dad.
If our belief in core life values like love, respect, cooperation, forgiveness, gratitude is shaky, we fail as mentors, guides, or role models to our children
You can’t command respect from your children unless they respect your actions. You can’t raise a loving, cohesive, closely-knit family by being self-centered and uncaring.
A family needs unconditional love, patient nurturing, and caregiving. It needs continuous courage and commitment to raising such a family.
Like a true leader, lead your children from the inside out. Be those firm, righteous, patient roots that allow a tree to grow and bloom fearlessly and independently.
If you found this article helpful, learn more positive parenting tips on our pages, Positive Parenting Tips For Healthy Child Development, and Raising Children in a Digital World
My name is Andrea Thompson and I’m a home based freelance writer. I’m 23 years old, married to my best friend, and mother to a wonderfully independent and opinionated 3 year old girl and step-mother to a sweet seven year old boy. I live in a tiny, little town in Kentucky, where I spend my free time fishing with my kids.
Writing has always been my passion, which I followed through high school, and for a while in college. Life happened, and once I discovered we were pregnant, I switched directions; opting for the healthcare industry because of the stability.
Finally, years later, I was in a place where I could leave the day job that never truly made me happy, and pursue my dreams. I’ve built, and am still building, my writing career from scratch. But, I’m passionate and I’m good at what I do. And, in the end, I can prove to my daughter that she can do anything she wants with this life.