Responsibility is a crucial concept essential for a child to
learn if they hope to arrive to adulthood with a good foundation. The earlier
we learn responsibility, the earlier we start being responsible for our own
actions. It is responsible to take responsibility to forgive, to share, to
help, to not blame, to correct, to improve and to make right what is wrong in
our actions. That’s who we are, people who make mistakes, but we have to learn
to take responsibility for them. If we are raised in a home where people do not
take responsibility for their actions and attitudes, we will do the same, and
when there is a problem, we will blame it on someone else. This inability to
face up to our own mistakes will wreak havoc on future relationships and
especially marriage. It will greatly hinder us in our ability to be good
parents.
When a parent teaches a child to be responsible, they are
saying to the child, I am responsible for you. Watch me, and you will learn how
to be responsible. When I make a mistake, I will admit it and make it right.
Growing up in a home like that clears away the chaos and brings clarity.
Growing up in a home where parents don’t take responsibility for their actions
causes a child to be emotionally out of control. The emotions of anger,
frustration, impatience, irritation or resentment all are emotional statements
that are being made inside of us. If we don’t have help to understand why we
feel this way, we will only become more confused. Those emotions can be like a
wild team of horses pulling us in reckless directions. Responsibility pulls
those emotions back and learns to control them by doing right by them.
This is precisely why good parenting teaches and models the
concept of responsibility. Very early on parents help their children identify
their emotions and help them understand where that emotion is coming from.
However, they do something else that is essential, and that is they teach their
children to own their own emotions and be responsible for them.
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