4th place 300x208 Homeschoolers, meet you at 3pm in your kitchen.

          It’s August 4th and if you are like us, you are eagerly counting the minutes until your kids go back to school. Will you miss them? Sure, but you will quickly get over it when you can hear yourself say a complete sentence without being interrupted by the Mommy/Daddy broken record or having to yell ‘Stop hitting/chasing/tickling/teasing/sitting on your brother/sister!’ We are looking forward to it with the same anticipation of a kid waiting for Santa. Besides, being in school is where our kids will experience the majority of success/failure in their young lives. Ah, the joys of being a kid.


          Lee says: I am firmly against home-schooling. This is my opinion. Many may disagree but I am really not willing to budge on that one. I have family that home school their kids and I find it such a terrible disservice to their children. I, of course, out of respect keep my opinions to myself. What someone does with their child, aside from any type of physical, emotional and sexual abuse, is their business. However, I do see some aspects of home-schooling as abusive.


          First of all, if you have ever lived and worked in the United States, you will agree that there is always an aspect of competition. You compete for a job then constantly surpass your performance to maintain your position. Status quo, at least in the more urban settings, is not an option. In a school, the competition is between students. We grade on a curve. We standardize tests. We give out prizes and create hierarchies called Honor Roll or Principal’s Lists. These rankings are paramount to a child’s ultimate choice of higher education. Little Jimmy’s rank in high school will determine whether they are going to Ivy League, State or Vocational schools.


          But are we putting to much pressure on Little Jimmy to succeed? Is the threat of a career as a Bird Groomer enough to have him study his algebra? Many parents feel that the anxiety surrounding success and competition is too much and it is creating a generation of automatons. I believe that there has to be a motivating factor and competition is the basis of human survival. I hate to get all Darwinian on you but survival of the fittest is alive and well and can be seen in all its glory during college admissions.


          The saddest part in all of this is the parents who are unaware. If you don’t see the big picture, your kid will not receive the pep talks and clarification surrounding moments of purpose like testing and rankings. Like the home-schooled kids, these children will miss their opportunities and scramble for scraps at the end. I realize not every child is made for college and that too much antagonism through competition is unhealthy but the system is what it is. You need to learn to navigate the high seas of comparison and leap victoriously through the hoops of success. Or you can spend the rest of your life making sure Pauly has a nice hairdo. It’s your choice.


          We recently went with our daughter to check out my old alma mater (Loyola Marymount University) and I was amazed at the changes. Kids are getting into schools with 8.0s? What the fuck is an 8.0? In comparison, I was not even half of that kid in high school. So what would my ranking be now? Would I have been as successful had I been born in this generation? I would hope so.


          All I know is that our kids have it rough and it will take some dedicated parents to support them to become who they want to be. I will take bets on my kids versus a home schooled kid any day of the week. They may not know all the states in the union but they could definitely kick their ass on a standardized test or on the playground!


          Paul says: There is so much about homeschooling specifically and a parent’s need to protect their child from every little opportunity to explore the environment of their lives. There is no joy in riding a bike if you remove the threat of gravity. I’m not promoting handing your kid a knife and wishing him luck but there is a need to test the limits in order to find them and, subsequently, gain the success of overcoming them. I guess the bottom line question is this: do your teats come with all 31 flavors?

 

sharebookmarx Homeschoolers, meet you at 3pm in your kitchen.

DSC01152 300x225 Success and other dirty words.

          If adversity breeds triumph then success spawns destruction. Marriage bonds have snapped under its tensile strength and many a child has been crushed by success’ weight. So, we at CoupleDumb, after an incredibly successful launch of our book Dysaffirmations: Because this kind of stupid takes work on Saturday, are going into Monday writing about success and doing everything  that it can not to do what is natural when facing the monster we call success; run for the hills.


          Paul says: Lee and I do not celebrate our successes. Please understand me, this is not an ideal that we promote but, instead, our own marital dysfunction that we are really, really trying to break. We celebrated our 20 year anniversary with a three day cruise because somewhere in our garden of crazy there was a weed of healthiness that said we should make note of two decades of success in relationship.  Anniversaries, promotions, book publications, and awards all slip away like a mirage.  And why is this? Because success is personal that is defined by the recipient.


          When I was a child, I made one of those turkeys, the kind were you trace your hand. I’ve always been kind of a short bus person when it comes to the visual arts so my hand-turkey had some form of Simpsons-like disease with the finger/feathers being too few and not proportional for a human. I don’t know whether hoofed animals can make hand-turkeys. Of course, I presented it to my mother who accepted it like mothers do with raves and kisses and stuck it, with a magnet, in the museum that was our refrigerator. Immediately that palsied turkey became my own surreal still life with poultry.


          As children, others assign our successes. Our parents say ‘good job’ when we make poopoo in the potty. Our teachers begin to place a letter value on our work. But when we get older, the locus of success moves from outside ourselves to inside. We get that ‘A’ in a class and we define whether or not it is a success. In my experience, we do everything that we can to discount the success. ‘I got an A but it was a low A’ or ‘It was an easy class’ or my personal favorite, ‘but I had to work my ass off to get an A’ thus implying that others received the grade easily and that I am not entirely worthy of my ‘A’.


          So we flit from event to event, looking for the next success to discount and always making accomplishment a function of the next goal up to be mastered. It is ingrained in our culture to downplay success. ‘Pride goeth before a fall’. And, of course, pride is one of the deadly sins. But I am not talking about pride here. I’m not writing about an inordinate opinion of my importance. What I am committing to myself is to thank God for the gifts that he made of me by stopping and taking a moment to say ‘good job.’ I’m going to decorate my refrigerator with some of my stuff. I’m going to enjoy my own deformed turkey.


          Lee says: May I say Good Monday everybody! Paul, in his cute and unsocial way, gets a little freaked around success and forgets his manners.


          For me, success is something I strive for and completely discount within the same breath. I was bred to be a winner. My parents were successful; from penniless immigrants to wealthy entrepreneurs within a matter of a handful of years. My brother is a business wizard and my sister has supported herself and family her whole life. For me, success has been a given. That’s what we do.


          But with my success comes a healthy dose of ‘Something is wrong here’; the disbelief so thick that any concept of cheering is lost in the investigation. Paul and I only recently noticed that we don’t celebrate our success. I know, so much insight but not much brains. I think the celebration is an acceptance that we are special. That validation means nothing without the belief that we are.


          Personally, I know I’m good but the idea that anyone else would recognize that is unfathomable. Welcome to my hovel of crazy. I am a very good employee and work my butt off every chance I get. Excellence is our motto and winning comes naturally. I would say that I am the employee of the month but that might come with cake and a certificate and we wouldn’t want that.

 

sharebookmarx Success and other dirty words.

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