I sometimes forget that I am here to help my readers in their life. Now, I know everyone doesn’t have kids in school and some of my readers look to me as an inspiration to when they make the choice to have children. Seriously, I am an awesome father that knows how to raise awesome children. Who wouldn’t want some worthless advice from me?
For those of you with children, you will probably learn from my worthless parenting advice that you have been raising your children all wrong. Yes, you are incorrect in the way you parent your offspring. Perhaps there is still time for you to reverse those bad parenting habits you have learned from the so-called “experts” out there.
One of the major things we worry about is when our kids go to Back to School and whether they will survive. Will they be able to make it through a day without us?
To prep your child for the first day of school (and the beginning of another exciting year of learning! Oh yeah!), you should set up an imaginary school at home.
Bullying:
Have your children dress up in the worst possible clothing combinations and make fun of their clothes. This teaches them that bullies come in all shapes and sizes and they aren’t safe anywhere….even in their own home!
Lunch:
Ask your kids what they want for lunch. To simulate a school lunch, take these tips to heart. If they want hot pizza, make sure it is cold and half cooked. If they want a cold sandwich, warmth it up so it taste terrible. Make sure the milk is warm too. Nothing like that taste of spoiled milk to ruin your child’s appetite!
School Supplies:
Do you get those crazy school supply lists? We do. I merely view them as suggestions. If every parent bought everything on the list then the teacher would have way too many school supplies. You should be that one parent that holds out and refuses to be a puppet in the educational supply purchasing machine complex that is controlled by our robot overlords.
Backpacks:
One way to strengthen your child’s back is to overload their backpack with useless stuff. Throw in their favorite rock you collected from your back yard. Add in a brick from the neighbor’s walkway. Have them take cans of food back and forth to school. What doesn’t break their little spines and spirits makes them stronger!
Reading:
Did your kids read during the summer? Well, if they didn’t your kid is probably in the same boat with about 80% of the other kids in their class. Not to worry, you can still have them read a cereal box or an old phonebook. That counts as reading doesn’t it?
Good luck with your student this year! Only 179 more school days for my kids until Summer Vacation 2014.
Ah, Boy Scout camp….the dirt, the camping, the lack of good bathrooms. It is all the experience of growing up and not having your parents hovering over you every minute of the day. Some parents enjoy sending their child off to summer camp (hey, free babysitting and they get fed three times a day? What isn’t to love?). Others are quite anxious that their little baby is headed off to summer camp. I can understand that.
Compared to school, summer camp is the helicopter parent’s worst nightmare. At school, the parents know what their child is doing. They can view their child’s grade online. They can volunteer to be the room parent. If their son messes up, they can email the teacher, then do a follow up voicemail to make sure the teacher received the email, and then write a note to the teacher (and send it back in the child’s homework folder), and to make sure the teacher got the note in the homework folder, the parent can come to the classroom before school starts.
What do you mean my son didn’t earn anything while at Scout camp?
Of course, it doesn’t matter that the email the helicopter parent sent was at 4:30 pm on Friday afternoon, the voicemail they left was at 4:35 pm, and the note they wrote was at 4:37 pm, and when they show up at school 35 minutes before school on Monday morning, they wonder why the teacher hasn’t replied yet.
Now, these helicopter parenting skills just won’t work for summer camp. Scoutmasters don’t answer emails and they don’t return voicemails. At the last summer camp this past week, I had no Smartphone coverage. And I like it that way.
During summer camp, helicopter parents don’t get a daily report from their kids about how their day went, they don’t know what they are eating at every meal, they don’t know what their bunk looks like, and they don’t know what they are working on. It is a wasteland of no information, a fog bank of the unknown, and a storm of mystery. Their helicopter is grounded.
What happens to the poor scout when their helicopter parent isn’t around? They survive. They wear the same clothes all week long (using these clothes as a bib, towel, and Kleenex). They don’t think of showering, they spill numerous food items on themselves and others. Brush their teeth? What is that?
Now what kind of Scoutmaster would let this “Lord of the Flies” attitude prevail? The same Scoutmaster who gives up his vacation time to go to summer camp with your child. The same Scoutmaster that pays to attend summer camp (yes, I pay to watch your son be a screw up).
Our job as Scoutmasters is to remind your son to put on sunscreen, drink his water, get to his merit badge classes, and wash his hands. If your son chooses not to do the fore mentioned items, that is his choice. Yes, it is a stupid choices but it is his choice. We’ll ride his ass and remind him about ten times a day but it comes down to him doing it, he has to be self managed. I’ll tell him to take a shower but that doesn’t mean he’ll do it. And when I ask him if he has taken a shower, he’ll say “yes” but that shower was the one back at his house three days ago. When I see him on the trail, I’ll ask him if he has been drinking his water (from the water bottle he left back in his cabin) and he’ll say “yes”. And when I see him sunburned and ask him did you put on sunscreen, he’ll answer “yes” (he put in on yesterday….doesn’t it last three days because he didn’t take a shower?).
A Boy Scout’s bed…a helicopter parent’s nightmare!
We are constantly reminding them to do things for their well being but that doesn’t mean they will actually do it. They’ll walk off and pretend to do something but they don’t.
Now we all know that the helicopter parent would be hovering and following their scout back to their tent, making sure they grabbed their toothbrush and toothpaste, escorting them back to the water spigot, watching them brush their teeth, and then walking them back to their tent and carefully instructing them how to place their toothpaste and toothbrush away.
Will they die if they don’t brush their teeth? Probably not. Will they be shamed into brushing their teeth after EVERYONE tells them that their breath smells like the inside of an outhouse? Yes, most likely they will brush their teeth after other scouts say they can smell their stinky dead rat breath from across the table. Peer pressure can be a wonderful motivator.
As I’ve said before, not letting your child do things on their own will lead to their failure in school, at Scout camp, and in life. Scout camp is the week long test of how you have failed as a parent. Does your child come back from summer camp smelling like the sewer plant down the street? Does your scout come back with no merit badges completed because he can’t do them without you?
One of the worst mistakes you can make is packing your scout’s backpack for summer camp. If you pack it, how is he going to know where anything is in his backpack? Have him lay out his clothes, you double check, and then he can pack his own bag. Then he can find everything at summer camp and his Scoutmaster won’t be asking him where his toothbrush is.
Land that helicopter now. Let your son do things on his own and learn from his triumphs and failures. Let him be peer pressured into doing the right thing.
As always, your witty comments and vast knowledge are welcome!