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TheQueen
07-13-2010, 07:30 PM
July 12, 2010
Accepting That Good Parents May Plant Bad Seeds
By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN, M.D.

“I don’t know what I’ve done wrong,” the patient told me.

She was an intelligent and articulate woman in her early 40s who came to see me for depression and anxiety. In discussing the stresses she faced, it was clear that her teenage son had been front and center for many years.

When he was growing up, she explained, he fought frequently with other children, had few close friends, and had a reputation for being mean. She always hoped he would change, but now that he was almost 17, she had a sinking feeling.

I asked her what she meant by mean. “I hate to admit it, but he is unkind and unsympathetic to people,” she said, as I recall. He was rude and defiant at home, and often verbally abusive to family members.

Along the way, she had him evaluated by many child psychiatrists, with several extensive neuropsychological tests. The results were always the same: he tested in the intellectually superior range, with no evidence of any learning disability or mental illness. Naturally, she wondered if she and her husband were somehow remiss as parents.

Here, it seems, they did not fare as well as their son under psychiatric scrutiny. One therapist noted that they were not entirely consistent around their son, especially when it came to discipline; she was generally more permissive than her husband. Another therapist suggested that the father was not around enough and hinted that he was not a strong role model for his son.

But there was one small problem with these explanations: this supposedly suboptimal couple had managed to raise two other well-adjusted and perfectly nice boys. How could they have pulled that off if they were such bad parents?

CONTINUE READING (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/health/13mind.html?src=me&ref=general)

Christy
07-13-2010, 09:52 PM
Yep, kids are their own people, for sure. My MIL's theory is, though, that 10% are going to be great, successful, good people no matter how they are raised, and 10% are going to be awful, nasty, hell raising people no matter how they are raised, but the vast majority, the other 80%, are a direct product of their upbringing.

Obviously no science to back that up, but I think she's probably got a good idea there.

And who's to say, at 17, this just is who he is? He's got a lot of room to grow yet.

erika
07-13-2010, 10:07 PM
Yep, kids are their own people, for sure. My MIL's theory is, though, that 10% are going to be great, successful, good people no matter how they are raised, and 10% are going to be awful, nasty, hell raising people no matter how they are raised, but the vast majority, the other 80%, are a direct product of their upbringing.

Obviously no science to back that up, but I think she's probably got a good idea there.

And who's to say, at 17, this just is who he is? He's got a lot of room to grow yet.

Interesting. I'd buy into that.

pinkrose
07-14-2010, 08:20 AM
Interesting. I'd buy into that. Me too.

figmentmom
07-17-2010, 12:42 AM
And let's not forget that you can be the best-intentioned parents in the world, with a strong commitment to faith, kindness, honesty and responsibility - but you have NO IDEA how strong peer pressure is, even with the best-brought-up kids. Sure, we do our best to instill in our kids that bowing to negative peer pressure can be lethal - but if the best kid in the world meets the wrong person at a vulnerable time in their life, things can go terribly wrong.