| A Parenting Book Worth Reading (really) |
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| Written by Amy Lowe | ||||||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 20 May 2009 | ||||||||||||||||
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The book begins with Tony’s confession: “By the conventional measure of a real man, I am sorely lacking.” He goes on to explain that he doesn’t enjoy those things that are usually associated with manliness, camping, building log cabins, and prefers warm beds and BBC movies. And much to his surprise, he and his wife were blessed with three very boyish boys. Now, for those of you who don’t fit into the “Dad” category, like myself, or have girls rather than boys, keep reading. In fact, many of the parenting challenges and mishaps explained, especially if you know my daughter, are very much applicable to girls.
I think our first belly roll occurred a few pages in, still
in
Tony goes on to describe his father, mostly absent, and a stepfather, a hardened Vietnam vet, who had little time for raising children except for the fear he instilled to be sure they didn’t interfere with his fishing and car racing. His few examples of manhood were skewed and dysfunctional at best. He then explains that he finds conflicting advice from society on the subject of raising boys as well. On a plane, while consoling and entertaining his one and three-year-old, he overhears two women’s studies professors discussing “the social construction of gender.” Exiting the plane, one of the professors leans over to him and says, “You should have had a girl. They’re less trouble.”
The tears began for Scott and I in the second section with Tony’s discourse on what a “real man” might actually be. He says, “Something in my bones tells me, however, that if we insist on molding wild-hearted boys into compliant creatures, then we destroy the essence of what was meant to emerge as courage and strength.” What an extremely hard thing for me, a person who mostly just wants to keep my composure, maintain some semblance of peace, and avoid any situations that may cause me embarrassment. This is not a recipe for teaching “courage and strength.”
Still in
It was in the section “Chasing Ice Cream Trucks,” and maybe,
just maybe, crossing the border into
We are quick to teach our children what they can’t do, or fill them with platitudes about being able to do anything, yet never joining them on an adventure so they can discover that the lie is actually closer to the truth. We teach them to be just like us—fearful, painfully aware of our limitations, realists, instead of adventurers. We kill their spirits before the world ever gets a chance.
Scott and I were moved, to say the least, by this little pamphlet, these little stories about raising courageous children. And I think you might be encouraged as well. You can find Raising Wild Boys into Men at www.pamphletguys.com. And more from Tony Woodlief on his blog Sand in the Gears at www.tonywoodlief.com, in RUMINATE’s upcoming Issue 12, and really just about everywhere else these days—The Wallstreet Journal, the London Times, and WORLD Magazine, to name a few.
~Amy Lowe Senior Editor
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