Not long ago, I was rushing up the street, carrying groceries and my briefcase, barely closed from all I had stuffed inside it, trying not to be late to pick up my daughter from basketball practice. One of her classmates, 11-year-old Damien, was walking from school toward me. I'd known Damien and his family for years, as part of a study I was conducting for my book, "Raising Boys Without Men."
"Can I help you with that?" he asked in a concerned voice.
Although the bag was tearing from the weight of its contents and the awkward way I was holding it, his question almost made me drop everything completely. People were meandering in both directions, and no one else noticed that I was struggling, but Damien saw in one glance that I needed help and immediately offered it. He took my grocery bag and walked back up to school with me. When I thanked him, he just smiled politely, said it wasn't a problem, waved, and continued off down the street.
Until fifth grade, he wore his hair short and dressed in nothing but jeans and T-shirts. Even after he let his hair grow long in sixth grade and wore red bandannas like the Hells Angels, he didn't let anybody's idea of what was "girlish" affect his behavior. In the school's annual musical, Damien stole the show with his theatrical poise and warm response to the loud applause from the audience. His onstage theatrics a very liberating experience for boys, did nothing to prevent him from being the first out on the play yard at recess for kickball, running successfully for class representative to the student council, or being a sometimes goofy but articulate class participant.
I call children like Damien "head and heart boys." Years of research on families and parenting have shown me how successful moms raise self-assured and caring sons by nurturing their "boy power" -- the artful combination of physicality and sensitivity to others' needs and feelings. To help your son grow up with confidence and respect for others:
Help Him Develop a Strong Sense of Well-Being and Sensitivity to the Needs and Feeling of Others
Talk and talk and talk with (not at) your son, and then talk
some more. As boys discover they are worthy of respect and
understanding, they learn to respect and empathize with others.
Encourage your son to recognize how he feels and show it,
whether the feeling is good or bad. Talk with him about what
may be making him feel that way. Learning about his own
feelings can help your son connect with others and to develop
into a caring, sensitive man.
Boys tend to shy away from face-to-face discussions. Connect with him in any way you can, anywhere you can. Use toys to prompt discussion. One mom uses puppets with her young son to talk about events in their lives. Initiate conversations in the car, on the basketball court, or in the kitchen, while cooking together. Despite feeling tired at the end of her workday, one mom began playing basketball with her teenage son because he seemed withdrawn. She expected it to be all dribble, shoot but when they started playing her son opened up, sharing his thoughts and feelings about school and home.
Listen to what your son tells you -- or doesn't tell you. Look for messages even in silence or outbursts. Listening -- not just to the words, but to the feelings behind them -- can reveal the kind of mothering your son needs to help him become a man.
Ten-year-old Caleb struggled with being small for his age. During hide-and-seek, he and his mom brainstormed about the advantages of being small, like finding a really good place to hide. Since people underestimated his superior athletic abilities, he had a secret weapon. Later, when a cousin said he was small for his age, Caleb easily listed all the good things about being small!
And while you're talking, repeatedly share your own values, including consciously challenging gender and other stereotypes, even when your son seems to tune out.
Foster His Respect for
Others
Respect for ourselves feeds our respect for others. So
accept who he is, instead of trying to mold him into your
vision of what you think he should be. You can encourage him to
be responsible to himself by helping him set his own goals and
expectations, and then live up to them. He will also learn
responsibility to others by doing his share of household chores
and other age-appropriate duties.
Establish clear guidelines for behavior and expectations for how family members and others are treated. Helping your son relate well to family and friends will help him become a reflective, conscious, centered adult with a strong sense of identity and moral fiber.
Copyright 2007 Modern Mom, LLC. All rights reserved.


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