The alarm goes off at 5am. You have an early morning presentation at the office and cannot afford to be late.
You
struggle to get out of bed, drag yourself to the kitchen and brew a
fresh pot of coffee before hitting the shower. You have just 30 to 40
minutes to leave the house before traffic starts to build up depending
on where you live.
You rush to dress, pour the coffee
in a traveling mug and it’s only as you are about to walk out the door
that you remember the house help is not yet up and you haven’t seen your
children.
You rush to her room, shout out her name and
remind her that the children need to be ready before the school bus
arrives at 6.30am.
Evening is no better. Working late
might save you half an hour of being stuck in traffic, if you are lucky.
By the time you get home, the children are asleep. That is the life of
parents in the city.
PARENTAL ABSENTEEISM
Is
it any wonder then that parents are ending up with children they hardly
recognise because of growing up without parental care yet you live in
the same house?
Regina Wanderi, the director of Family
Life Educators and Counsellors, says that parental absenteeism is
becoming a growing trend even though it may be unintentional among some.
“The
world of work is regrettably causing parental absenteeism as they spend
more time outside the home trying to earn a living and support their
children,” she says.
Career coach George Nuthu says the
growth of professionalism has created a desire for people to climb the
corporate ladders and make more money to fund their lifestyles.
“Today,
getting a good job and keeping it is pretty tough, so career
development ends up taking more of a parent’s time than raising
children. Parents are relegating their duties to maids, teachers,
boarding schools and grandparents,” he says.
Ms Wanderi
says some parents would rather spend time relaxing at social gatherings
at the end of a hard week just to rejuvenate themselves.
“If
they are not working, they will be attending events outside the home
with family and friends without the children or just whiling away time
at a restaurant,” she says.
The end result is that the children’s upbringing is left largely to house helps.
“Raising
children is a big responsibility that requires a lot of sacrifice in
character and discipline for you as a parent. More parents, especially
the younger ones, are no longer willing to give up on their comforts and
become role models so they relegate their duty to others,” says Nuthu.
PASSIVE ROLE
According
to Ms Naomi, one of the trainers at Naomi’s Fountain – an academy that
trains housekeepers and nannies – more parents are asking for house
helps who are conversant in English not only to train their children in
the language but also to assist in homework while they are away.
Nuthu
says as a result of the guilt that comes with playing a passive role in
the child’s life, parents end up spending a lot of money to make their
children comfortable with lavish birthday parties, presents and paying
for school trips to compensate for their absence.
“If
the parents are not there to give adequate training and advice, children
will turn to friends and the Internet to satisfy the human need to
relate and have people to talk to. Over time, this manifests in them
making wrong decisions,” he says.
PRIVATE AFFAIR
Ms
Wanderi says the situation is further compounded by the lifestyles that
most families embrace where instilling discipline is a private affair.
“Families
nowadays have cocooned themselves and would even take offence if a
family member, neighbour or teacher criticises the way they are bringing
up their children. A neighbour will just watch as a child strays
because they are afraid of action being taken by the child’s parents if
they punish them,” she says.
Nuthu says that parents
who play an active role in their children’s lives are better placed to
advice on career paths as they have known their interest from a young
age.
As they become teenagers, parents find it harder to keep up with their child’s activities.
Some
parent’s do not even have an idea what the children do in their rooms
with their mobile phones and computers or even who they communicate
with.
“Even before giving those privileges, you need to
set ground rules over their use. Clearly inform the child that favours
can be withdrawn when they stop being accountable to you as the parent.
They are under your care as long as they have not turned 18 years and it
is your obligation to mould their interactions,” says Nuthu.
At
the end of the day, when the parent receives the dreaded call from
either the school that their child has misbehaved or from the police
that their child has been arrested for a crime, their first reaction is
denial.
“It is easier to be in denial because it
deflects responsibility from you as a parent. Whatever you do, the
child’s behaviour reflects negatively on the way you have brought them
up,” he explains.
“Parenting should not be a
by-product, where you improvise along the way. From the onset you need
to decide the kind of environment you want your child to grow up in and
the kind of people you want them to be in the future. We always make
time for things that are a priority to us and your children should be a
priority,” he says.
This article was first published in the Business Daily.
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