{"id":3752,"date":"1972-02-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-02-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1972-vol-53-no-2-the-dynamic-family\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:42:50","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:42:50","slug":"february-1972-vol-53-no-2-the-dynamic-family","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1972-vol-53-no-2-the-dynamic-family\/","title":{"rendered":"February 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No. 2 &#8211; The Dynamic Family"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Today&#8217;s family has the greatest                     opportunity the family ever had to act significantly so as                     to assure the continuance of all that makes people human &#8211;                     the virtues of justice, freedom, love, prudence, and courage.<\/p>\n<p> Novels of home and family life have been on the best-seller                     lists ever since fiction started to be written. They told                     enchantingly of homely characters and incidents, pathos, humour                     and love affairs, and they added a touch of melodrama when                     the outside world impinged on the moral and affectionate life                     of the family circle.<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s novels run on more bumpy roads. The social map has                     been torn up, the tribal totems and taboos have been discarded                     as being old-fashioned. People must make decisions about how                     to manage their lives while they are being bombarded with                     many new psychological, economic, social, educational and                     political theories.<\/p>\n<p>In the old days families moved through the years in customary                     grooves, the momentum and direction carrying over from generation                     to generation. Today they are compelled to select new paths,                     broaden their responsibilities, sharpen their thinking, and                     develop power. The dynamic family will be like a great machine                     in having purpose, plan and driving force.<\/p>\n<p>Parents are greatly concerned about preparation of their                     children for graduation into maturity. This is fit and proper,                     because it is in the family that a child develops his attitude                     toward life, and it is the family that determines the way                     he measures up to challenges and the degree in which he lives                     successfully and happily.<\/p>\n<p>But parents given to much worry about their children should                     consider whether the worry is out of proportion to the cause.                     Look at it in this way: not every young person who appears                     to be different, queer, or uncouth is mentally or morally                     warped. Behaviour which perplexes a parent may be the normal                     response of a healthy full-of-life human being to some situation                     which from his frame of reference seems to be intolerable.<\/p>\n<p>These young people are in a transition stage from adolescence                     to maturity made difficult by social change and world upheaval.<\/p>\n<h3>Overlapping generations<\/h3>\n<p>In the story of life there are many chapters. Every chapter                     may flow calmly, recording the life of a generation. But where                     the chapters overlap there are likely to be blots and scorings-out                     and revisions, because at the overlapping of two generations                     neither is quite sure of its standing in the mind of the other.                     Each was raised in a different environment at a different                     stage of society&#8217;s development.<\/p>\n<p>Dramatic social and technological innovations have altered                     the structure and style of our way of life. Parents brought                     up in the pre-technological society do not, unless they have                     kept up with events, see with the same eyes as their children.<\/p>\n<p>There is no crime or folly on either side if the children&#8217;s                     opinions are sparked by expectation and their parents&#8217; assuredness                     watered down by experience. The urge toward change can be                     healthy, as in the Renaissance with its new art, its broadened                     views and its constructive energy, or it can be diseased,                     as when it tears down before it plans what to build, or alters                     without thinking of results. Both young and old need to study                     so as to learn how to use change to make it contribute to                     their welfare.<\/p>\n<p>It may be worth while to apply some old-fashioned beliefs                     and methods. A cartoon in <em>The School Guidance Worker <\/em>shows                     an automated teaching machine applying for a job at an employment                     office for teachers. The machine says: &#8220;I was displaced by                     a little old lady with a piece of chalk.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The excellent family<\/h3>\n<p>Conferences and discussions show that there is nothing upon                     which the conscience of our time is more determined than that                     the family shall be preserved.<\/p>\n<p>A study guide to the Report of the Royal Commission on the                     Status of Women in Canada, a booklet entitled <em>What&#8217;s in                     It&nbsp;<\/em>;?, published by The National Council of Women                     of Canada in co-operation with La F\u00e9d\u00e9ration                     des Femmes du Qu\u00e9bec, says: &#8220;Although other agencies                     have taken over many of its functions, the Commission concludes                     that marriage and the family persist as a valid institution.                     Human beings, whether children or adults, need to &#8216;belong&#8217;                     in a close social relationship with others.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is not enough to watch television together. To sit in                     a circle in the dark, eyes glued to the bright screen, is                     hardly the best arrangement for enjoying one another&#8217;s company                     or exchanging ideas. Far better is the family meal, an occasion                     to be together in comfort and relaxation. If dinner is &#8220;at                     all hours&#8221;, or if parents and adolescents dine at different                     hours or in different places, family life becomes not only                     emotionally but dynamically impoverished.<\/p>\n<p>It is through the exchange of ideas in such a family circle                     that excellence is born and bred. What goes on in that group                     determines whether those who sit there shall become first-class                     men and women, with active brains, disciplined imagination,                     sensitive feelings, and dynamic aims.<\/p>\n<p>Much of today&#8217;s unrest may be traced to lack of a sense                     of quality&nbsp;&#8230; aesthetic quality, humane quality, and                     moral quality. The family provides a background that will                     enable young people to perceive qualities and discriminate                     so as to seek excellence.<\/p>\n<p>Most to be feared is a moral vacuum. A person may be ignorant                     in politics, literature, psychology, and many other sciences                     and arts without hurting society materially, but if he is                     ignorant morally he taints society.<\/p>\n<p>Where else is a child to learn virtue than in the family?                     &#8220;Virtue&#8221; is a word too seldom used. It can be applied to many                     thoughts and deeds that go to make up everyday life. Some                     virtues contributing to mastery of life and happiness in it                     are: justice, frugality, industry, sincerity, moderation,                     humility, discretion, courage, wisdom, fortitude, and honesty.                     These are features that cannot be ignored by any creed or                     cult or movement without damage, and their nurture is an undoubted                     duty of the family.<\/p>\n<h3>The parents&#8217; part<\/h3>\n<p>Sparked perhaps (say some psychologists) by the guilt feeling                     aroused by World War II, there has been a swing toward making                     things easy for young people.<\/p>\n<p>It is a mistake, injurious to himself, to allow a youth                     to evolve in a vacuum of non-resistance. Because his opinion                     and his wishes have never been opposed, he develops a massive                     belief in his own wisdom and a one-track faith in his own                     authority.<\/p>\n<p>To build a dynamic family by following a rule book would                     be difficult. A babble of advice is useless. Children are                     not phenomena to be investigated, analyzed and treated as                     &#8220;cases&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>A family is a collection of human beings acting together,                     but they have not the rigidity of form or the foreseeable                     effects on one another that the gears, brushes and magnets                     of a dynamo have.<\/p>\n<p>Parents need to be sensible, discreet, reasonable, sensitive                     and co-operative. A rational man and a woman did not take                     each other in marriage merely as agreeable companions, to                     be good-humoured together, patient, and entertaining. They                     assumed duties, one of which is toward their children.<\/p>\n<p>Mothers seem to adapt to the bewilderment of parenthood                     more easily than do fathers. This is sensed in some of the                     &#8220;Nativity&#8221; paintings by great artists, Filippo Lippi&#8217;s, for                     example, in which Joseph has a puzzled expression that is                     both pathetic and amusing. But in a dynamic family the father                     does not leave responsibility for the children&#8217;s upbringing                     to the mother. His obligation does not end when he supplies                     shelter, clothing and food.<\/p>\n<p>United, the parents need to display emotional maturity.                     Their major function, after providing materially for the subsistence                     of their children, is to give compassionate, supportive, personal                     warmth. They inspire and guide. They give advice based upon                     the present state of the evidence as they see it.<\/p>\n<p>Every parent must be prepared for surprises, like a naturalist                     seeking wild flowers on a mountainside who comes unexpectedly                     upon the den of a grizzly bear. In such an upsetting situation                     the parent will not work himself into an emotional state,                     but ask what he can do about it and then start doing the wisest                     thing he can think of.<\/p>\n<h3>Some ingredients<\/h3>\n<p>Some of the ingredients of the excellent life will be in                     stock in every family: others need to be restocked. Those                     most urgently needed include personality, a sense of values,                     tolerance and discipline.<\/p>\n<p>Here is the great problem facing young people: they are                     required at a certain stage of their development to commit                     themselves to something and to assume responsibility for the                     consequences.<\/p>\n<p>At that point it is essential that they should know themselves,                     and it is part of the family function to help them toward                     a truthful and helpful self-evaluation. The parents&#8217; job is                     not to protect the child from stress and the need for effort                     and thought, but to help him to develop inner strength and                     competency so that at the crucial moment of take-over he will                     have confidence in his ability to cope.<\/p>\n<p>The dynamic family will turn out young adults who are of                     a stature equal to the challenges of their environment.<\/p>\n<p>If parents believe it to be their duty to carry all their                     children&#8217;s problems, the children are not being given a chance                     to tune themselves for this change in their life course. They                     will remain infantile or they will rebel against the nothingness                     of their existence.<\/p>\n<p>Dynamic parents will construct in their home those ambitions                     and interests needed to prevent a vacuum forming inside their                     children, a space that may be filled with futile and demeaning                     activism.<\/p>\n<p>Young people, whatever label they may put upon it, are in                     search of happiness. They can be helped to make sure that                     their sets of values fit together to form a model of what                     will be for them a happy state, free from mediocrity and pretense.<\/p>\n<p>A person becomes mature by developing a philosophy of life,                     based upon knowledge acquired, a clear-eyed view of today                     and tomorrow, and expectation. These are the virtues needed                     if one is to contribute something worthwhile to the advancement                     of humanity. They do not exist in the same mind with half-truths,                     false labelling, or muddy thinking.<\/p>\n<p>While providing security, sympathy and sociability, the                     family should also provide an environment of tolerance. It                     is in the family that a child picks up the elementary lessons                     in getting along with people and the virtues of love, pity,                     and concern.<\/p>\n<p>A parent has done something of great worth when he can say:                     &#8220;I brought up my children without prejudicing them by precept                     or example against any other children on the grounds of colour,                     race, religion, social status or intellectual capacity.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Discipline<\/h3>\n<p>In a good family there are always present, without being                     obnoxious, the curbs and controls that constitute the essence                     of good government. Discipline is necessary, not primarily                     for its contribution to family harmony but because it must                     be learned as a quality essential in all walks of life.<\/p>\n<p>Discipline without love begets resentment: it is the devoted                     and skilful blending of the two that develops children into                     adults able to cope with the environment in self-reliance,                     self-mastery and courage.<\/p>\n<p>Rules are necessary in the family, but they should not be                     so many as to be oppressive. The steadfastly-enforced rules                     should be those that relate to the cardinal virtues: justice,                     prudence, temperance and fortitude.<\/p>\n<p>Is it ever necessary to take the velvet glove off the iron                     fist? Indeed it may be. Honeyed words are not always the best                     means to instruct or guide. A pat on the back does not always                     substitute for a strong push.<\/p>\n<p>The intelligent use of compulsion is preceded, ideally,                     by persuasion. An attempt is made to arrive at agreement about                     what is right, but the pressure of an enforcement agency is                     as necessary an element in the home as in the community.<\/p>\n<p>How do you persuade a child about the wrongness of an action?                     You present the facts as you see them, tell the benefits of                     doing things the right way, and add a suggestion for compliance.                     And having made the point by persuasion or compulsion, forget                     the transgression: dip the fault in your affection and wash                     it out. The grace of forgiving is a necessary partner of the                     power to discipline.<\/p>\n<h3>Dynamic living<\/h3>\n<p>The family is the place where, more than in any other, the                     art of co-operative living is learned. Here are generated                     and cultivated mutual confidence, fair play, a sense of belonging,                     a sharing of goals, team-work, comradeship and trust. In a                     word: morale.<\/p>\n<p>Parents and children will benefit by working together on                     problems and projects that affect the home. Give the children                     a genuine and useful function in the household, not a made-up                     job to paint a false picture of participation.<\/p>\n<p>Let the children have a say in assigning the tasks. If some                     parents still shy away from the family council in which all                     members discuss family matters, they must concede the advisability                     of consulting in advance any member of the family about matters                     which affect him.<\/p>\n<p>One of the most useful functions of the parent is to encourage                     children to express themselves, to tell their hopes, desires                     and fears. This cannot be done in an occasional confrontation                     in which we urge junior to tell all. It is an ongoing thing,                     a day-after-day conveying of our belief that the child is                     one of us, with things to say that are worth listening to.<\/p>\n<p>It is arrogant to demand that one&#8217;s ideas be accepted without                     fair debate. Even John Milton in his <em>Areopagitica<\/em> &#8211;                     that great outburst of splendid anger in the cause of freedom                     &#8211; did not go further than to demand a hearing.<\/p>\n<p>Listen obviously and attentively. Avoid the patient sort                     of listening that lets what is said in one ear and out the                     other. A textbook on the art of counselling says with wisdom:                     &#8220;Reserve at least two thirds of every hour for talking on                     the part of the counselee.&#8221; And do not treat a child&#8217;s idea,                     even if it seems to you to be a silly one, with contempt.                     Take time to discuss it, thereby building the child&#8217;s sense                     of being a person.<\/p>\n<h3>Praise and credit<\/h3>\n<p>William James, eminent United States philosopher, said:                     &#8220;The deepest principle of human nature is the desire to be                     appreciated.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A compliment is an effective way of raising a child&#8217;s ego,                     and it is one of the greatest stimulants to renewed effort.                     It is mean to be niggardly with praise in the fear that it                     will &#8220;turn the child&#8217;s head&#8221;. G. B. Shaw wisely remarked that                     &#8220;to withold deserved praise lest it should make its object                     conceited is as dishonest as to withold payment of a just                     debt lest your creditor should spend the money badly.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Upon being shown a piece of work done by a child &#8211;                     a few inches of embroidery, a toy made at the workbench, or                     a page of homework &#8211; look for something to praise. There                     are no more destructive people alive than those whose first                     aim is to find fault.<\/p>\n<p>Practise diplomacy. No two or three people can live together                     without disagreeing now and then. Diplomacy provides a technique,                     a sort of code of good manners:<\/p>\n<p>it is also organized good sense. For every trick that is                     taken by screaming, three are lost that could have been taken                     by diplomacy.<\/p>\n<p>Mediation between warring children is not attained by acting                     as a sort of peace-keeping force. It is brought about by a                     careful discovery of the rights of the question and a steady                     adherence to the precept that what is right and fair ought                     to be done.<\/p>\n<p>A very positive way in which to prepare children for life                     is to keep their sights high with regard to the friends they                     make. Parents find it fitting to encourage the friends to                     come to the house. When a welcome is extended and a suitable                     place assigned for the young people to study together, play                     games, talk, or make music, the parents need not be haunted                     by the thought of secret or street-corner meetings. Give the                     child a chance to experience the pleasure and learn the rites                     of hospitality, not just at once-a-year parties but as a matter                     of course.<\/p>\n<p>The areas needing parental attention cover the alphabet                     from &#8220;A&#8221; for amusement to &#8220;W&#8221; for work. In his early school                     years the child begins to be aware of the world of work. What                     he hears at home about his father&#8217;s and his mother&#8217;s work                     will influence the direction of his thoughts and beliefs.                     If they are constantly complaining about the hardships of                     work the child will come to hate the idea of work; if they                     show a confident attitude toward work as a way of life the                     child will look forward to having the opportunity to contribute                     his own work&nbsp;&#8230; and all work is a contribution to society.<\/p>\n<p>The boy or the girl may grow up to work in an occupation                     not yet invented. The best a parent can give him in preparation                     is a set of principles, good in whatever environment he finds                     himself.<\/p>\n<h3>Youth&#8217;s responsibilities<\/h3>\n<p>All the responsibility for enjoyable and invigorating family                     living does not rest upon the parents. Young people, in fact,                     play a big part in adding dynamics to the family. Participating                     in the benefits bestows upon them the right and the privilege                     to contribute.<\/p>\n<p>Parents should not have to become accustomed to being the                     forgotten people. They gave many years of thoughtful care                     to their offspring, and common courtesy &#8211; even in the                     absence of affection &#8211; requires that they and their interests                     be remembered.<\/p>\n<p>The notion of duty, the joy of helping those we love, appreciation                     of the old folk who once forgave us our trespasses and turned                     the other cheek to our impudence: all these are likely to                     be labelled &#8220;sentimental&#8221;. But, in the words of the late Fulton                     Oursler in <em>Lights Along the Shore<\/em>: &#8220;The ancient Commandment                     still thunders from Sinai, telling honourable men to honour                     parents, even if, sometimes, they seem unreasonable.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Young people are ready, when allowed, to take up the challenge.                     In the midst of a hullabaloo about the ways of youth it should                     be noted that most young people in Canada are adjusting well                     to their approach to maturity. The enthusiasm with which they                     take up good causes is a dynamic quality that they should                     try to carry into family life: for here, surely, is an honourable                     and good cause.<\/p>\n<p>There is a lot of talk among young people these days about                     human rights, and it is a proper subject to consider, but                     does anyone need to be reminded that the Golden Rule cannot                     be surpassed as the greatest declaration of human rights?                     It does not start with parades and campaigns, but in the quiet                     stillness of people&#8217;s minds. It blossoms in the nourishing                     environment of the family.<\/p>\n<p>The responsibility of young people in any situation &#8211;                     in the home, in school, on the playing fields or at work &#8211;                     can be simply stated&nbsp;: they are responsible for doing                     their best.<\/p>\n<p>A child may have in him the making of a gifted student capable                     of being enrolled with the top one per cent: the stratum that                     gives us our poets, philosophers, scientists, statesmen, industrial                     leaders, musicians and artists. If something enters the mind                     of such a child so as to cause him to waste time in school,                     or drop out, all the world loses something valuable.<\/p>\n<p>In a dynamic family the parents will intimate, without pressing,                     that they expect their children to do their best. A survey                     in secondary schools in Toronto about 1955 showed that parents                     of underachievers &#8220;tend to exhibit a neutral or uninterested                     attitude toward education, to be over-anxious, over-solicitous,                     or inconsistent in their attitude toward the child.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Being gentlefolk<\/h3>\n<p>&#8220;Gentlefolk&#8221; is an old word, unused today, but it is a good                     word to describe those in the ideal family. They are &#8220;persons                     noble in character, manners and behaviour, destitute of harshness&#8221;.                     Dr. Johnson, in his dictionary published in 1799, describes                     gentility as &#8220;elegance of behaviour&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>To be gentle in family life means simply this: one is not                     mean or little, one never takes unfair advantage either of                     his power or his weakness, one does not mistake sharp sayings                     for arguments, one may be strong in his opinions but he is                     not unjust, one is thoughtful for others, generous in his                     judgments and modest in his manner.<\/p>\n<p>We can find in the family the harmonious integrated unit                     which holds out hope of escape from the direction in which                     society as a whole seems to be drifting, a direction which                     leads to a terrible, if not completely disastrous, conclusion.                     To rescue the family, and make it the dynamic centre of improvement                     in the world, is a cause big enough to enlist the most enthusiastic                     thought and work of both parents and children.<\/p>\n<p>The effective family is not passive, merely existing. Everyone                     in a dynamic family has something and someone to think about                     besides himself. Instead of watching a family drama on television,                     to play a part in it is a hundred times more interesting.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3752","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>February 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 2 - The Dynamic Family - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1972-vol-53-no-2-the-dynamic-family\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"February 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 2 - The Dynamic Family - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Today&#8217;s family has the greatest opportunity the family ever had to act significantly so as to assure the continuance of all that makes people human &#8211; the virtues of justice, freedom, love, prudence, and courage. 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Novels of home and family life have been on the best-seller lists ever since fiction started to be written. 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