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Today's Moral Isolationists

Catolic Twin Circle,
Spring 1996

Ron S e i g e l
The Big Things in Life

 

One thing fascinates me about Dr. Laura Schlessinger. the popular radio psychotherapist.
It doesn't involve her nationally known radio call-in program. Although I find refreshing that she opposes abortion and generally emphasizes personal responsibility, I must confess I sometimes disagree with the specific advice she gives.
Indeed, I tend to be skeptical about people, no matter what their academic credentials, who give advice on the radio to anyone who calls in. I wonder if Solomon himself was capable of solving the problems of strangers in five or 10 minutes - just in time for commercial breaks.
What fascinates me. through, about Dr. Laura is something her pre-teen son said.
Last year, a newscaster asked him whether it was difficult to have a mother with such an "absolute" sense of right and wrong.
He said. "It's nice, because she stresses the big things, not the little things."
His words are well worth remembering on this Mother's Day.
All too often parents emphasize the small things, the petty things, the things that have nothing to do with moral values. They ridicule their children for not winning a Little League game or not making the cheer-leading squad - They show infinite attention to how their kids dress or wear their hair.
Parents often respond this way because they want their children to be "adjusted," or because they're concerned about how the children will be treated by others, or because they're worried about how their children will reflect on them.
If parents show some sense of proportion about these concerns, their behavior is natural and may be beneficial. However, excessive concern about such things teaches children to be emotionally dominated by the attitudes of the world, to surrender their moral convictions, rather than to risk friction or rejection. Sometimes parents confuse the little, things with the big things.
Psychiatrist W. Hugh Missildine once noted that, in our "moralizing" American culture, children are often labeled as "bad" for behavior which is neither malicious nor sinful, but simply part of any child's natural inexperience with immaturity.
He noted that youngsters are made to feel guilty and "worthless" because of their curiosity, their impulsiveness and their eagerness to explore their environment. In shot, children are morally condemned, because, in their childishness, they do things chat are inconvenient, annoying and embarrassing to parents; things that set in the way of parents' wishes.
This may be one reason why so many children have grown up with a general hostility to- ward authority.
As Thomas Merton noted: "Acts that are in no way seriously evil cover us with confusion. making us feel as if we were criminals. The pain caused by these inoffensive actions is often so strong that we rebel against it completely."
In our rebellion, he added, "we imagine we have turned against God. After that, we dread to : face him, imagining that he wants to revenge himself upon us."
Because of Dr. Laura's emphasis on the "big things" (the questions of right and wrong), she was able to provide her son with a greater sense of freedom about the "little things." She is clearly raising a child who knows that there is a difference. This is a fascinating accomplishment, one that all mothers (and fathers) might do well to emulate.

Rob Seigel is a freelance writer who lives in Highland Park, Mich.

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