Wall Street Journal (April 14, 2005).
It's Not About You: The Emotional
Toll Of Being Too
Involved In Your Kid's Life.
By Sue
Shellenbarger
The fact that overinvolved parents can cause
problems for their kids is well-known. Now, new research shows they can drive
themselves nuts too.
In one of the first studies
of this mental-health issue among parents, researchers found that parents who
base their own self-worth on their children's accomplishments -- as measured by
their answers to such questions as, "My daughter's failure can make me feel
ashamed" -- have worse mental health than those who base their self-worth
on other factors. Often called "helicopter parents" (they hover),
these overinvolved moms and dads reported more sadness, crying and negative
beliefs about themselves and less joy, contentment and life satisfaction, says
the study of 408 parents, released Saturday at a conference of the Society for
Research in Child Development in Atlanta.
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Worse yet, there's no
upside: Parents whose children did well, as measured by their college grades,
showed no improvement in well-being, says Missa Murry Eaton of Pennsylvania
State University, Sharon, Pa., who co-wrote the study with fellow psychologist
Eva Pomerantz of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Instead, they
continued to score lower than the other parents on measures of mental health.
Apparently, Dr. Eaton says, the ever-present threat of a child's failure looms
so large that it blots out any joy over the successes.
Parental overinvolvement has
increased markedly during the past 20 years, says Peter N. Stearns, provost of
George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., and author of a 2003 book,
"Anxious Parents: A History of Modern Child-Rearing in America." He
cites a competitive frenzy over school success; guilt over mothers working, and
growing parental distrust of schools and media as an influence on kids. While
there are benefits, including parents' spending more time with their kids, Dr.
Stearns says, the emotional bottom line for parents isn't pretty: Parental
worry and dissatisfaction are up sharply, he says, based on his own study of
parent polls, sociological research and child-rearing materials.
In Dr. Eaton's study, 20% of
the parents were found to base their own self-worth on their children's performance.
While "all parents feel bad when their children don't do well," Dr.
Eaton says, only overinvolved parents "feel bad about themselves."
Most parents keep such
worries under wraps. "You don't talk about this with people," says a
New York human-resources manager and mother of two teenagers who admits to
waking up in the night stressed-out over her daughter's performance in dancing.
But "when your child doesn't achieve something, you sit and think,
'Omigod, is this a reflection on me? Is it that I'm not smart enough, or I'm
not talented enough? Am I inferior because she's not the star?' "
The hazards of basing your
self-worth on external factors, such as others' judgments, were documented in a
2001 study of 1,300 students, co-authored by the University of Michigan's
Jennifer Crocker. The study found that looking for your self-worth in others
fosters more intense and volatile emotions in general -- higher highs and lower
lows.
The focus is shifting now to
parents, particularly at stages of kids' lives when hyper-competition surfaces,
such as joining youth sports, or applying for college. For the first time, the
National Association for College Admission Counseling will offer a panel
discussion on "College Admissions as a Mental Health Issue" at its
annual conference next fall, with a heavy emphasis on parents.
Many overinvolved parents
have good intentions. Bob Nemec, who had little time as a child with his own
father because his dad worked three jobs, says that to fill that void, he
sometimes gets too involved with his own two sons, 13 and 8. "When your
kids hurt, you hurt twice as bad," says the Glen Ellyn, Ill., sales
representative.
If his older son, who plays
on a traveling baseball team, gets criticized by a coach, Mr. Nemec feels sad
and protective, remembering his own childhood. "When things don't go his
way or he's 0-for-4 or there's a day when he's benched, I'm thinking about that
quite a bit. It does get me in a little bit of a fog...hyperfocused on his
issues," Mr. Nemec says.
Some warning signs of
helicopter parenting: You fall into a lasting funk when your child doesn't
perform at expected levels, and enjoyment of other aspects of life slips away,
says Richard Chaifetz, CEO of ComPsych, Chicago, a provider of employee-assistance
services. Preoccupation with the details of a child's activities, practices,
schedules and performances is another sign, says Dr. Chaifetz, a
neuropsychologist.
If you hear yourself
starting sentences about your child with "we," as in, "We're
applying to Harvard," you're over the edge, says Scott White, a
high-school college counselor in Montclair, N.J.
The remedy: Practice
focusing on something else, such as hobbies or sports. And consider getting
counseling to improve your own self-regard.
In the past, Beth Hauser
became so distressed when one of her two sons called her at work about a
problem or setback that co-workers would ask, "What's wrong with
you?" she says. Anxiety "weighs on my heart and shows on my
face," she says. When her older son auditioned for a magnet
performing-arts school, "I made myself physically ill" with headaches
and stomach pain.
Over time, the Deerfield
Beach, Fla., human-resource manager saw how her overinvolvement undermined her
son's self-confidence. She has learned to detach and let her children, now 18
and 13, fail and face consequences. That fosters self-reliance, and she feels
better too. Detaching "is not easy, but important," she says.
"After all...this is not about me."