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Leaving It Up To Them

Even in radical homes, children don't always follow their parents' path. How some families are dealing with their children's choices.

Girls running, photo by Shannon Ashley

The most we can do is teach our children to honor themselves, each other, and the planet.  The rest is up to them.

Photo by Shannon Ashley

Shortly after her second birthday, we noticed that Ula (now three) was developing a wandering eye. She had difficulty seeing the pictures in her books, and flatly refused to eat with a fork. We took her to a developmental optometrist, and spent an hour in an examination. She needed glasses.

Ula disagreed. The first pair, made extra-durable to survive a child’s play, had various pieces snapped off of them in less than a week. The second pair was thrown off during a hike up a dirt road. We went back and found they’d been crushed by a passing car. Subsequent pairs were snapped in half, had the ear pieces broken off, or the lenses removed. Ula then took to hiding her glasses. We found them in the perennial beds, in potted plants, tucked in my underwear drawer, dangling from a screw underneath a picnic table. Since we try not to be wasteful consumers, I’m too embarrassed to divulge the number of glasses we’ve lost or destroyed in a single year. Our optometrist has grown annoyed with us. He pronounced Ula the most non-compliant patient he’s had in a very long career working with children (We always knew she was destined to be exceptional).

Radical Homemakers Book Link

Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture

By Shannon Hayes
Left to Write Press, 2010, 300 pages, $23.95.
Support YES! when you buy here from an independent bookstore.

I am often asked how I plan to keep my children on the farm, or at least out of the fray of our consumer culture. My answer is simple. I can’t.

It isn’t as though Ula doesn’t need the glasses. With them, she can find food with her fork, enjoy detailed illustrations, put together puzzles, and investigate garden bugs. We have spent countless hours attempting to get her to wear them, trying everything from coercion to bribery. It doesn’t matter. I am convinced Ula came into our family with the singular purpose of teaching us the meaning of free will.

That lesson has gone a long way. Because our lifestyle is deeply variant from the mainstream, I am often asked about how it will affect my children as they enter adulthood, how I plan to keep them on the farm, or at least out of the fray of our consumer culture. My answer is simple. I can’t. If I can’t make my kid wear her glasses, even when I know they are good for her, how the heck can I expect to control her choices in adulthood?

I received a beautiful letter from a veteran Radical Homemaker recently that really drives this point home. Marie (not her real name) and her husband both chose to forgo conventional careers, raising their daughters with no electrical appliances except a fridge, washing machine, lights and a radio. They’ve managed to raise their family on an almost non-existent income, making ends meet through part-time freelance work, skilled crafts, and music. Both daughters were homeschooled, and completed college through distance learning programs. Now ready to forge her own path in life, the eldest, Angelica (also not her real name) is armed with a boatload of resources. She is an accomplished musician, dancer, and craftsperson, and positively rich in her ability to live on very little. Then girl meets boy. And, much to her mother’s despair, discussions about big incomes, mortgages, and flat screen televisions ensue. The relationship progressed, and the young couple decided to move in together. Angelica began questioning the value of her unique lifestyle, and the young man urged her to “get a real job.”

Fully aware that similar struggles might lie in my own children’s future, I hung on every word in Marie’s correspondence. I shared her angst in wondering what her daughter would do. One would think, from our level of concern, that Angelica was shooting heroin or breaking into houses. How funny, as Radical Homemaking parents, that the fears we hold for our children are that they should opt for the straight and narrow! But it is a genuine worry. We try to raise our children with the skills to require little from the Earth, to honor their hearts, relationships, and personal creativity. We hope that they will be able to move forward with freedom from our consumer culture, equipped with the resources to enjoy a lifestyle that honors social justice, family, community and the planet.

But as Ula has taught me, there is little we can do if our kids refuse our guidance, even if we think it is for the best. We must know in our hearts that we have lived our ideals, that we have demonstrated it is possible to live in a way that is true to our souls. The rest is up to them.

That seems to be working in Marie’s case. Just before moving in with her boyfriend, Angelica spent two weeks wrestling with his “get a real job” suggestion. Then she dumped him.

Now, if only I could get Ula to wear her glasses …


Shannon HayesShannon Hayes wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Shannon is the author of Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture, The Grassfed Gourmet and The Farmer and the Grill. She is the host of grassfedcooking.com and radicalhomemakers.com. Hayes works with her family on Sap Bush Hollow Farm in Upstate New York.

Interested?

  • Read more from Shannon Hayes' blog about the life of a radical homemaker.

  • The Kid Question: How one woman decided whether reproduction had a place in her quest for a sustainable life.

  • The Birthday Balloon: Somewhere in our consumer culture, we have confused material items with expressions of love.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Hayes, S. (2010, July 20). Leaving It Up To Them. Retrieved February 08, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/blogs/shannon-hayes/leaving-it-up-to-them. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

Second Opinion

Posted by darleen at Jul 29, 2010 11:28 AM
Is it possible that the glasses are not working for your daughter? I would try another eye doctor just to be sure that he is treating the problem correctly. Sometimes problems are not always immediately apparent to even train professionals. I would get a second opinion.

It is my experience that when a vision problem is corrected children willingly wear the glasses. Their may be something else going on as well. I start with a pediatric ophthalmologist.

letting kids choose

Posted by Deb at Jul 29, 2010 12:48 PM
I found that when I let my young kids have some choice in the eye glasses they were going to wear, they were very excited about wearing them. I think the suggestion about proper prescription is also worth investigating.

thanks

Posted by Shannon at Jul 30, 2010 05:00 AM
Thanks, both of you, for your suggestions. Actually, we've now been through three doctors and a number of prescriptions, and Ula has chosen her glasses each time. The current pair has held up for a record-breaking two months, where she willingly wore them all day, every day...until last week, when she took them off her face, laid them lense-down on a brick floor and used them to spin around on her heels, turning herself into a human top.

Radical Lifestyle

Posted by Angela at Jul 30, 2010 09:15 AM
The subtitle caught my eye, "Even in radical homes, children don't always follow their parents' path." I thought, this lifestyle isn't about getting my children to follow my path (at least that's not how I understand it). It's about seeing our lives as something to enjoy together now, not just a preparation for the future. I love how you responded "I can't" to the concerns of how you'll get your daughter to live the way you do as an adult. I remember the moment I realized that I don't even have control over whether my children will grow up to be happy, healthy, respectful fulfilled adults.

Ula sounds amazing, and she's lucky to have such an open minded and open hearted mom :)

my 2c

Posted by Noel at Aug 09, 2010 02:48 PM
I follow this when I worry about how we're raising our 3 girls:

"Children are more likely to heed your example than your advice."

I'm waiting for my wife to finish your book so that I can read it, but she really likes it so far! Thanks for all that you do.


On children -K. Gibran

Posted by Stefania at Aug 13, 2010 06:39 AM
    On Children
     Kahlil Gibran

    Your children are not your children.
    They are the sons and daughters of Life's longing for itself.
    They come through you but not from you,
    And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.

    You may give them your love but not your thoughts,
    For they have their own thoughts.
    You may house their bodies but not their souls,
    For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow,
    which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.
    You may strive to be like them,
    but seek not to make them like you.
    For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.

    You are the bows from which your children
    as living arrows are sent forth.
    The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite,
    and He bends you with His might
    that His arrows may go swift and far.
    Let your bending in the archer's hand be for gladness;
    For even as He loves the arrow that flies,
    so He loves also the bow that is stable.

conventional children of unconventional parents

Posted by queen of string at May 02, 2011 01:20 PM
The Khalil Gilbran is one of my favourite things written about raising children.

I have been self employed the last 9 yrs and now am following an unconventional path. I have somehow raised a,now 17yr old, son, who is following the most conventional path he can find and saying he wants to work in an office!!!! I'm not entirely sure how this happened.

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