When I was a kid, I loved playing with my
LEGOs. I didn’t have many, and mine were
the basic block and flat panel varieties that would bore kids senseless today
with all the cool shapes available to them, but they provided me with hours and
hours and hours of creative bliss.
That sound they made clacking on the floor as I
dumped them out of my cardboard box.
Those favorite pieces with the teeth marks where I
used my incisors to pry them apart a thousand times.
The opaque wedge piece that ALWAYS covered the “cockpit”
of my LEGO space ships.
Memories.
Whenever I went to my happy LEGO place, I quickly
adopted the persona of Master Builder. I
was an architect, an expert engineer if you will. I built and built BIG, but I never destroyed
my creations. If I assembled the world’s
tallest LEGO tower (or at least the tallest one in my bedroom), I never
purposefully let it topple back to earth to be smashed into smithereens. If I built a gnarly new space ship (and I was
a prolific space ship builder), my ships never crashed or blew up because mine
were the good guys and the good guys always won. Of course, I would have to disassemble my
precious blocks to build new creations, but that always took place after play
was over and there was never a hint of wanton destruction.
I was a builder.
Flash forward three-and-a-half decades and I realized
something today watching my boys play with their LEGOs.
Words are
like LEGO’s: they should be used to build.
As an educator, I know the value of a well-placed
compliment. Few things can make a kid’s
face light up like me telling them they did a great job or that I’m proud of
them for working so hard. Outside of
school, I can choose the perfect word and instinctually know when to use it to
make even the most stone-faced dowager positively sparkle with joy. Phrases such as “You can do it” and “I
believe in you” and “That’s beautiful” will either melt your heart or make
swell with pride, and the most powerful words in the universe, “I love you,”
can change the course of human history.
In watching my boys, I also realized that I failed at
using those uplifting words time and time again.
The object of my failure?
My oldest son.
I have two sons, and both of them are
miracles. The older of the two, the one
I affectionately call my “first-born child” on social media, was prayed for and
over for years and years by many, and the day he was born is to this day one of
the major high points of my life.
However, as much as I love him and adore him and would give my life for
him, he is a very headstrong boy, and at eleven years old, I often question
whether either one of us will see him turn twelve. I suspect some of you have children like him
and you struggle as well. Still, it does
not excuse my actions.
I am the king of tearing down my son with words.
I’m not proud of it, but I have always been hyper critical
of my boy, perhaps because we’re so unalike in many ways. I was raised to be obedient and was, for the
most part, almost always so. I never
verbally questioned a decision my parents made, I worked hard in school and
pushed myself to excel to make excellent grades. I have been fiercely independent most of my
life and have always had a strong work ethic having held a job of one sort or
another since I was sixteen years old. I’m
“Type A” all the way and will make sure you know it not because I brag about it
but because you can see the excellence in my results.
My first-born child, however, argues with us often,
and it’s the norm to tell him numerous times to do something before it gets
done. He questions our decisions as a
matter of procedure, he feigns helplessness due to a lack of motivation, and
getting him to do something that requires hard work is like performing a root
canal on yourself-- painful and nearly impossible. Add to the mix a bad case of the “slow
motions” and self-centeredness, and you can see why we butt heads.
Now before you say anything, we’ve tried every
course of action you can suggest to “correct” the boy from spanking (yes, we
believe in it and it has been effective in short term payoffs) to grounding to
time out to the silent treatment to going on strike. Likewise, we’ve tried the nurture approach,
the let-him-set-his-own-boundaries theory, the sit-him-down-and-reason-with-him
method, and a ton of positive reinforcement techniques. Sometimes we make progress, and sometimes we
take huge steps backwards. The fact is,
he is simply a stubborn and headstrong ball of “Grade A” 100% kid.
No, we are definitely not alike in many fundamental
areas, and as hard as it is for me to say, that’s okay.
What is NOT okay is my biting tongue tearing him
down over and over again.
While I do not call him names and I have never
cursed at him, I am not kind in how I verbalize my displeasure. I raise my voice often and “put him in his
place”, which is just a diplomatic way of saying I am overbearing in my words
and demeanor. I am constantly on him to “hurry
up” and “try harder”, and that is just letting him know that he is not good
enough. Instead of saying “Good job on
that project,” I find myself spouting out “You could have done that part
better.” Really? Man, am I ever a heel.
To make matters worse, for all of his negatives
(and who among us doesn’t have a plethora of negatives), he is abounding in
positives. He is wonderfully artistic
and draws better than any eleven-year-old I know. He is musically gifted and can play piano
beautifully and has a voice like and angel.
He is caring and nurturing with children younger than himself, a trait
that usually manifests as being a great big brother. He can be amazingly empathetic, and there are
times he does something out of love or kindness or loyalty that make me
practically swoon with appreciation and pride.
He’s a remarkable boy and a gift like no other.
So why can’t I see and remember the good when I’m
faced with the difficult?
Perhaps it’s because I was never good enough to my
step dad and he let me know every day how useless I was. Believe me, that is not the way I feel toward
my son, but maybe a bit of that critical nature rubbed off and resides in
me. Perhaps it’s because I pushed myself
hard to succeed and just find it difficult to deal with those who do not share
my vision of success. Perhaps it’s an
unconscious feeling of unhappiness with where I find myself or the stress of
living my life and I’m just a bully that takes it out on someone that’s
weaker. I don’t know, but it doesn’t
excuse my behavior one little bit.
I love my son.
I love him just the way he is.
There are things I would like to see change with
the boy, but those things shouldn’t affect how I show and verbalize my love for
the kid.
He is my first-born child, my heir, my birthright,
and I need to change my ways before it’s too late. In really thinking about it, I don’t want him
to be like me-- I want him to be better
than me.
It’s time for some major reexamination of the junk
that comes out of my mouth.
He’s my son
and he deserves it.
It’s time to dust off the forgotten LEGOs of my
memory and be the Master Builder again.
He’s my son
and he deserves it.
It’s time to use my words to build my boy.
He’s my son
and he deserves it.
It’s not going to be easy, but how much of what’s
important is?
He’s my son
and he deserves it.
I love you, first-born child, and I’m sorry for my
words.
YOU’RE MY SON
AND YOU DESERVE IT.
It’s time for me to build you a ship and help you
soar.