Raising your own Superheroes
February 2008
by Matt Binz (Mr. HomeScholar)
Step Two: Catching Fire
In
the first article
of this series, I discussed the role of homeschool
parents in discovering and shaping the passions that are built into
each of their children. One thing I probably should have
mentioned, however, is that the process of discovery may be very long
and full of false starts. Sometimes you get
lucky and your kids catch fire relatively early in life.
Other
situations require much more patience. It is not unusual for
kids to go through junior and senior high school without
gaining a
sense
of self-knowledge or higher purpose. If this describes your
family, do not despair. This is normal. It does,
however, suggest why the world seems to be filled with adults who are
without passion or purpose in their lives. If catching fire
is so difficult to accomplish in a homeschooling family, where both
parents are fully invested in their
children, think how difficult it is for a spark to kindle
in the
impersonal environment of public schools. Still,
the best opportunity to raise a superhero who is ready to engage the
world in their area of passion is through the careful nurturing and
encouragement of their families.
In most families,
“catching fire” is a slow process and not a
one-time event. In the 2004 Pixar movie, The Incredibles,
this is demonstrated in the characters of Bob and Helen
Parr’s
children, Violet and Dash. The older sister of the precocious
Dash, Violet does not seem to understand her purpose and
gifts until very late in the movie. In modern
parlance, she
suffers
from low self-esteem. We see her in various scenes exercising
her super-abilities (turning invisible and casting force fields) to
disappear from a boy she likes and fighting with her brother.
In other words, she does not have a
meaningful outlet for her gifts. Her mother (Elasti-girl) is
so insistent that her children not exercise their super-abilities (in
fear
that they will be discovered) that she inadvertently snuffs the flame
in her daughter. Violet’s brother, Dash, knows that
he is built for speed and is constantly whining to have an opportunity
to demonstrate it. His father (Mr. Incredible) agrees and
regularly argues with his wife to allow him to join the track team and
truly become whom he is meant to be.
In
our family, Lee and I agreed to encourage whatever passions our kids
demonstrated. That did not mean, however, that we
didn’t have a lot of false starts. At various times
in our family, our kids were “into” architecture,
interior design, aviation and computers. Our garage sales are
still filled with relics of these misadventures. One time we observed
Kevin coaching a five-year old on a chess concept and were completely
convinced that he was going to become a teacher. He displayed
the
tenderness and patience of a young Mr. Rogers. While teaching
as a career is likely not in Kevin’s future (not analytical
enough), he has managed to parlay his good natured demeanor into a very
rewarding vocation as a chess coach.
The key is a
commitment on the part of the parents to understand their children; to
recognize how God built them and to identify and provide
opportunities to develop their gifts. Homeschooling is the
perfect environment to discover these gifts because you can observe
your children in many different environments and learning
situations. In public school, you are likely to miss some of
these “a-ha” moments, simply because you are not
there to witness them.
Even
if the speculations about your kids don’t pan out, these
interactions are a very valuable component to their growth.
In our home, Lee and I often played the game of “Catch the
Kids Doing Something Right.” We would observe them
doing something new and we would say things like “I see you
were being very tender and sweet teaching chess to that little
boy” or “I noticed you really enjoyed teaching your
Sunday School class”. These interactions did not
necessarily lead to instant self-actualization in the kids, but they
did reinforce ideas that they were forming about themselves.
Kevin heard so frequently that he was kind, gentle, loving and tender
that he eventually incorporated that into his self-image. We
are
convinced that in the future this will make him a tremendous husband
and father. Since he was young, Alex has heard that he has
important ideas that need to be shared. He believes
this
about himself and this, in turn, will enable him to be a strong
leader.
It
is important that your observations are not just flattery or wishful
thinking but are based on real events. True self-esteem is
always built on real accomplishment and not simply on some egalitarian
desire that everyone is “special”. As
that little sage, Dash said in The Incredibles,
“When
everyone is special, no one is.” Kids
aren’t
dumb. They know the difference between getting a trophy for
participating in little league and getting one for being MVP.
Being “special” outside of accomplishment cheapens
real achievement. Do you ever wonder how the military can
take
young men and women, some of whom may have very little by way of
obvious gifts, and in a short time produce self-confident, mature
citizens? I believe a significant component of that
transformation is that recruits are given responsibility to perform
real and meaningful work. In the military,
accomplishment is
recognized in a meaningful way, while mediocrity and indifference are
discouraged (usually with extreme prejudice.)
As homeschooling parents, we should also strive to give our kids
something meaningful to do. In our family, we did school for
four
days a week. In the early years, the fifth day was for visits
to
the park, book report lunches or play dates with friends.
When
they became teens, however, Friday was reserved for them to find a real
job and pursue their area of passion. For Kevin,
this meant
demonstrating his maturity and chess skills to a National Chess Master,
Elliott Neff, and getting hired as a chess coach in area
schools.
For Alex, this meant communicating his economics knowledge to the
leadership of Discovery Institute in Seattle and becoming a
research intern.
While
as parents, we all believe our kids are special. It is
critically important how we communicate this idea to our
children. Praising kids for mediocre performance or for
simply
“trying” without the companion commitment necessary
to
achieve excellence will lead to a generation of narcissistic,
self-indulgent adults. While our family enjoys the hit TV
show
American Idol, we intentionally miss the early episodes each season
because we can’t bear to watch the pathetic parade of
hopefuls
being
filleted by the judges. But what would possess young people,
whom
I’m sure are perfectly competent in other areas of their
lives,
to publicly display their deficiencies in front of millions of
viewers? My guess is that as children they overdosed on the
two
unconditional affirmations from the Cult of Self Esteem: “You
are
Special” and “You can do
anything”.
But
is it responsible -- is it kind -- to feed such pabulum to
children? It could be like the parents of The Human
Torch
encouraging him to be a firefighter! Remember, the
parent’s
role to help their children discover the gifts that God has placed
inside them, and then to shape and mold their kids as they grow into
those
gifts.
The process of
catching fire can take years and, to be honest, most
homeschooling parents will not be able to point to a single event in
the lives of their children that lit the fire. But whether it
is by
lightning or by rubbing two little sticks together, the job of
homeschool parents is to keep the tinder dry and to gently fan even the
smallest spark until it starts to blaze.
Email: Lee@thehomescholar.com
Call Toll-Free: 1-888-LEE-2HELP
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