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In Praise of Black Sheep
By Johann Christoph Arnold
Rule-breaking children make the most self-reliant and independent adults.
There's a black sheep in every flock, and there are few of us who don't know
one, or didn't know one as a child.
Every family, every class, has one: that
brother or sister, boy or girl, who's always in trouble, who's prone to
stretch limits or take things "too far," who's embarrassingly honest, who
never fits in. It's that child over whom every teacher puzzles longest and
every parent loses the most sleep.
But no matter how natural the phenomenon, being a misfit is never easy.
Because children are so vulnerable, and because they are dependent on the
adults around them, they are far more sensitive to criticism than one might
guess, and far more easily crushed. And even if their natural forgetfulness
and their amazing capacity to forgive relieves most children of much that
might burden an adult, there are those whose self-confidence can be shriveled by an
unjust accusation, a cutting remark, or a hasty
miscalculation.
Whenever we pass judgment on a child, we fail to see him as a whole person.
True, he may be nervous, shy, stubborn, moody, or violent; we may know his
siblings or his background, or think we recognize family traits. But to
focus on any one aspect of a child, especially a negative one, is to put him
in a box whose sides may not really be determined by reality, but only by
our own expectations.
Obviously, every child is different. Some seem to get all the lucky breaks,
while others have a rough time simply coping with life. One child
consistently brings home perfect scores, while the next is always at the
bottom of the class.
Another is gifted and popular, while still another, no
matter how hard he tries, is always in trouble and often gets forgotten. As
parents, we must refrain from showing favoritism, and from comparing our
children with others. Above all, we must refrain from pushing them to become
something that their unique personal makeup may never allow them to be.
Neither should we forget that raising a "good" child is a dubious goal in
the first place, if only because the line between instilling integrity and
breeding self-righteousness is so fine. Getting into trouble can be a vital
part of building a child's character. As the Polish pediatrician Janusz
Korczak points out: "The good child cries very little, he sleeps through the
night, he is confident and good-natured. He is well-behaved, convenient,
obedient, and good. Yet no consideration is given to the fact that he may
grow up to be indolent and stagnant."
It is often hard for parents to see the benefits of having raised a
difficult child - even when the outcome is positive. But strange as it may
sound, I believe that the more challenging the child, the more grateful the
parent should be. If anything, parents of difficult children ought to be
envied, because it is they, more than any others, who are forced to learn
the most wonderful secret of true parenthood: the meaning of unconditional
love. It is a secret that remains hidden from those whose love is never
tested.
At a conference in the sixties, at a time when "mal-adjustment" was the
educational catchphrase of the day, Martin Luther King shocked teachers and
parents by turning the supposed problem on its head. "Thank God for
maladjusted children," a colleague remembers him saying.
When we welcome the prospect of raising the problematic child with these
things in mind, we will begin to see our frustrations as moments that can
awaken our best qualities. And instead of envying the ease with which our
neighbors seem to raise perfect offspring, we will remember that
rule-breakers and children who show their horns often make more self-reliant
and independent adults than those whose limits are never tried. By helping
us to discover the limitations of "goodness" and the boredom of conformity,
they can teach us the necessity of genuineness, the wisdom of humility, and
finally the reality that nothing good is won without struggle.
About the Author: An internationally known children's advocate, Johann Christoph Arnold has
been a guest on over 100 talk shows, and a speaker at numerous colleges and
universities. His books on sex and marriage, children's education, death and
dying, forgiveness, and peace have sold over 200,000 copies in English and
have been translated into eight foreign languages. Endangered tackles some
of the most crucial and controversial issues he has addressed to date.
In thirty years as a family counselor, Arnold has advised thousands of
families and individuals, including single parents, prison inmates, and
teenagers. As a father of eight and grandfather of twenty-four, he draws on
a wealth of personal experience, bringing an intense passion for children to
his writing.
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