The Last Day of 'Who Cares?'
By Skye Thomas
Yesterday was the last day of ‘Who Cares?’ for my oldest child.
Today is his first day of high school. From now on, his choices will have a
long-term effect on his life. Nothing will ever be the same for him.
Our culture doesn’t make a big deal of that moment when a teen is officially
considered an adult. Many older more traditional cultures have ceremonies and
such so the teen and everyone around him knows from that day forward he is
considered an adult and is expected to behave as such. By the time they’re
old enough to move out, they’ve had a few years to get comfortable with
the idea that they’re adults. In America, we just say that at the age
of eighteen you are old enough to vote, to get married, to serve your country,
to go to jail, and to move out of your parent’s home. There’s no
ceremony, no transition, no empowering.
If we’re honest, we have to admit that by the time our children enter
into high school, our influence has seriously dropped off. That’s not
to say that our love, presence, and role modeling isn’t still crucial.
It’s just that we’ve already taught them most of the really important
stuff that we were going to teach them. We’ve taught them to believe
in themselves, or we haven’t. We’ve taught them about religion,
or we haven’t. We’ve taught them the Golden Rule, or we haven’t.
We’ve taught them to say no to drugs and premarital sex, or we haven’t.
You get the idea. By the time our children are entering into high school they
know what we think of life and what we think of them. They know if our approach
to life and towards them is basically optimistic or not. They know if we value
higher education or not.
I told my son the truth, “From the day you walk through those doors
into high school, I no longer have any real control over your life. You’re
in charge. If you decide to flunk out of school, there’s really nothing
I can do about it. If you decide to blow off my rewards and punishment systems,
there really isn’t a damn thing I can do to stop you. If you blow your
grades, all I can do is deny you driving privileges. Legally, I don’t
have to let you drive. Otherwise, I can’t really do much to force you
to be a good student. I can’t force you to stay clean and sober. I can’t
force you to surround yourself with quality people.
You stand four inches taller than me and weigh as much as I do. What am I
going to do? Spank you? Put you in time out? I can ground you only if you agree
with me that you should be grounded and only if you choose to honor my authority.
I can’t physically force you to stay home at night. I can’t physically
force you to show up for classes. Your size alone dictates that I no longer
have power over you. I can only lead from a place of having earned your respect.
Up until now, nobody really cared what kind of grades you got. The grades
you get now effects whether or not you get into a college. The grades you get
now effects whether or not you get scholarship money. Whether or not you join
in student government, compete in sports, participate in the arts, it all matters
now. The grades you get and the activities you choose to participate in now
effects your placement in society when that eighteenth birthday hits.
Will you be a high school dropout or going away to the school of your choice
entering into a field of study that fascinates you? Will there be scholarship
money to pay for your schooling or will you be forced to struggle and work
your way through school? The grades you get now effects how hard will you have
to work in the future. The better your grades, the more activities you excel
in, and the longer you stay in school, the easier you will have it later.
From this day forward, you’re in charge of your destiny. You decide.
How much paid vacation do you want as an adult? How many nice toys will you
be able to purchase? How nice of a place will you live in? How important are
expensive clothes to you? How many hours per week will you want to work to
support your children? Will you travel? Will you love your job? You actually
have the power now to start choosing for yourself and designing for yourself
what your future will look like. You do not have the freedoms nor the responsibilities
of an adult yet, but you do have the power to create your own dreams. That
means that from this point forward you are really secretly in charge of your
future
As a toddler, I taught you society’s opinions of right and wrong. As
a child, I taught you the laws of cause and effect. Throughout the process,
I did my best to help you find your unique and beautiful authentic self. You
aren’t legally free to leave and do as you please, but you are now at
that point where I have to teach you how to create a life for yourself that
is meaningful and worthy of you and your incredible heart. From this day forward,
you get to choose your soul’s journey.
Yesterday, you played at the beach as a carefree child. Today, you began your
journey into adulthood. From this point forward people are watching, they care
about your work ethic, your personal conduct, who you surround yourself with,
and who you have chosen to become. You have four years to design and build
your wings. They will carry you when you leave the nest. Choose wisely, my
dear.
Who cares? You do.”
Copyright 2003, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow’s Edge
About The Author: Skye Thomas began writing books and articles with an everyday
practical approach to spirituality, motivation, and inspiration in 1999 after
twenty years of studying spirituality, metaphysics, motivation, and parenting.
More of her articles can be found at www.tomorrowsedge.net as well as free
previews of her books.
skye@tomorrowsedge.net