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The following column is not baseball-specific, but is certainly worth reading:

Reprinted from http://www.mysanantonio.com/opinion/Parents__there_are_..._kids_happiness.html

Parents - there are no shortcuts to kids' happiness

I just want my kids to be happy.

This has become “a kind of sacred star in the galaxy of parenting wisdom,” says child psychologist Aaron Cooper. A default dream, it is what Cooper calls the “fall-back wish” of parents for the lives they'd like their children to live. If kids can't always grow up to be successful, benevolent people — what grandpa referred to as “healthy, wealthy, and wise” — then at least they can be happy.

As someone who has spent more than three decades working with children and families, Cooper has heard the happiness mantra over and over again.

“Parents come in for a counsel and the child is struggling,” he told me recently. “And almost always, the parent says: ‘I just want her to be happy, that would be the most important thing.”'

Cooper noticed that the concept would pop up in parent-teacher conferences and open houses at elementary schools. He caught a glimpse of it when television psychologist Dr. Phil, during an appearance on “Larry King Live,” asked the interviewer to define his hopes for his children, and King quickly responded: “That they be happy.” Cooper also found a study where a group of psychologists traveled the world and asked parents to describe their fondest wish for their children, and the No. 1 answer was — surprise — happiness.

“It was assaulting me from every direction,” he said. “And it got me thinking: What does this mean? What's the consequence of this concept in our children's lives?”

The search for answers led to Cooper's recent and important book with co-author Eric Keitel, “I Just Want My Kids To Be Happy! — Why You Shouldn't Say It. Why You Shouldn't Think It. What You Should Embrace Instead.”

One of the first things that Cooper wants us to understand is that this idea of obsessing over children's happiness is a new phenomenon. He insists that over the last 50 years, parents have channeled Thomas Jefferson and made “the pursuit of happiness” (for their children) the top parental goal.

“I know that my grandparents would never have said that happiness was the most important thing,” said Cooper, who is 57. “My parents, I don't think, would have said it either.”

Some of this is about the destructive trend of parents-as-best-friends and the fact that — when their children are feeling blue — today's parents seem to have such low tolerance that they give into every whim, demand or tantrum.

“A couple of generations ago, parents could tolerate kids being unhappy, being mad at them,” Cooper told me.

“They didn't care. The kids would go off and pout for a while, but it never occurred to people back then that their children had to be happy all the time.”

As to why things have changed, Cooper believes that to some degree, Americans are victims of their own success.

“As a great many families in our country have enjoyed a certain level of comfort and convenience and affluence, life has become a little bit easier in some of the practical ways,” he said. “So the wish for parents isn't just for a good job or an education as a means to good job — the wishes that our grandparents had back then. Now a lot of families and parents take that for granted so the emphasis has shifted to something less practical and less tangible, which is kind of a quality-of-life dimension that they wish for their child.”

Cooper insists that the wish for happiness is reinforced through the consumer marketplace, which is selling “shortcuts to happiness ... a certain car, a certain vacation, a certain hair product.” Not to mention a pharmaceutelevision ads to convince us that the road to happiness, or at least the detour around sadness and depression, is by “popping the right pill.”

Parenting is the most difficult and important job ever invented. You mess it up and society pays the price. We should give up on trying to make our kids happy and concentrate on raising children with good values, compassionate hearts, a mighty work ethic, respect for others and a willingness to take responsibility for their actions. We should teach them to follow their passion and strive to succeed, but to never forget that we learn a lot from failure. And much of the rest will fall into place.

ruben.navarrette@uniontrib.com
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Very nice artice and food for thought. Please forgive me for my opinions here if they go against the grain of "today's society." First, kids want discipline. I know! I have a "non-traditional" classroom. Most would look at my classroom and think that there is little discipline. I had an observer the other day from a local college sit in. As the ebb and flow started between each class she came up and asked how it works. In one of my classes, I asked the students to describe the process. One of the guys said, "Mr. Butler's the BIG DOG!" Everyone laughed. I then asked the students if there was discipline in that classroom. Everyone laughed. Then, one student said, "No one messes up in here." Why? I don't deviate on the rules I set. Kids just want direction, discipline and to know you care.

I'm so angry at our society for equating happiness with material goods. To me, that is a recipe for disaster. My daughter's friends a few years back went through a phase where they were voting on everything. It was akin to those scenes in the movie "The Way We Were," where they would look at each other and say, "best year." Well, I was consistently voted "meanest Dad." My daughter didn't have a cell phone, didn't have the latest craze, didn't ... We gave her exact time we would pick her up from every gathering, game,... If she wasn't waiting she didn't go somewhere for a while. IN SHORT, WE WERE PARENTS. I distinguish between "PARENTS" and "BIOLOGICALS."

BB (daughter) recently was asked to demonstrate at a National Coaches Clinic. Most of the coaches there commented that they thought she was the happiest kid they have seen in some time. In fact, one coach commented that she was the hardest worker in the clinic and the happiest. Why? Discipline, as I've stated, our ability as parents to say no, and to be honest she has been raised not only in a loving family but in a church. Ok, so I don't apologize for that. Having faith in her life is also vital to her happiness.

I apologize for such a long recital. If you want your child to be happy, talk to them. Give them a hug. Tell them often that you love them and that your love is unwavering. Tell them no. Do things with them. You are not their best friend. You're their parent but you can have a relationship so much better than "friend!"
Last edited by CoachB25
Thank you, fillsfan.

While I agree with much that has been written, I disagree with the tone of the article in that I find it hard to believe that parents of any generation don't want their children to be "happy." Happiness is different for everyone, and any parent's idea of what makes their child happy may or may not be accurate. I know for sure that what has made my life happy is not the dream that my mother had for me (I think it had something to do with a white picket fence...). It is up to me to find my own happiness, and my responsibility to raise my son in a home where he can grow up secure in the knowledge that I'll do whatever I can to support a future where he can find his own happiness.
Last edited by 2Bmom

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