Contours of Courageous Parenting

Parenting is a journey. It has its ups and downs.

The short read

If you have been following my work, you will know that I work by connecting dots. Here are the dots for today’s post:

  • Parenting is like hiking in un(der)-developed terrain. There is no road map. If you are lucky someone who came before may hand you a contour or topographical map. Bring your own compass.
  • Any parent will tell you that what worked with child one often does not work with child two. Each child is a unique parenting journey.
  • There are highs and lows throughout the journey.

The longer read

Why is the book titled “Contours of Courageous Parenting“?

Orienteering

Did you have one extra-curricular activity that you really enjoyed in high school? One that has left its mark as you moved into your adult life?

For me, that was being a girl guide.  My favourite activity was the various hikes we had to do to earn our badges. The moment my hands touched that peculiar green that is so characteristic of contour maps, I was in my happy place! I’d study the concentration of the contour lines. Then, armed with some water and a compass, I would set off into the relative wilderness with my troop.

 

There were journeys where the terrain was gentle. And those where the climb was much more challenging, and the steep climb took a lot out of you.

Each time the team’s experience reflected the various conditions. Besides the topography, there are other elements that also had an influence. If you got caught in a downpour or had to cross a creek, that made for a very wet journey but was the story that tied us together years later. Food was an integral part of the journey with memorable sandwiches that tasted all the better for the effort expended before you indulged. If you made it to the top of a hill, you got to enjoy the beauty of your surroundings.

I learned a lot from being a girl guide. Including “Be Prepared.”

Parenting is also a journey

Parenting is just such a journey into uncharted territory.

We start off in the lives of our young babies aged 0-3 years having full responsibility for them. Our decisions determine their lives. They are reliant on us.

We feel our way forward on this parenting journey. Just when we think we have made it through swampy terrain, we find ourselves in quicksand.

We work hard to develop their independence.
We first anxiously teach them to walk and talk. (What were we thinking?!)
We take them on playdates and encourage them to make friends. So they can learn to socialize.
We teach them their numbers and alphabets and send them to school.

Each child is an individual journey. Their triggers are different. Their personalities do not blend. They each like a different vegetable and a different sport.
We have to find the North Star for each of them, so that they maintain their individuality.
We steer by an internal compass that responds to their specific needs.

We sit patiently on the sidelines as they move through kindergarten onto elementary, high school and then post-secondary.
We sit tentatively on the bleachers as they perform pirouettes, referee a soccer game or (worst) are in the net as a hockey goalie.

Highs and lows.

We evolve in our role. From caregiver to commander to coach to consultant.

As we do, our journey changes.
The nexus of our influence over their lives and their decisions stretches.

Once we had to find the faith to make it through the night nursing a sick child with 103F fever.
Now we have to find a new courage.
The courage to be quiet. Yet remain supportive.
The courage to allow them to test their own boundaries.
The courage to allow them to fail, so they can see their way forward.
The courage to show confidence in their ability to get it right in the long run.
So that our child can grow into their own version of an adult.
So that the cycle can repeat.

We all grow. We all continue to mature.

It is the parenting journey.
And I would not trade it for anything.

Contours of Courageous Parenting – Tilting Towards Better Decisions

The book is now published and available on most Amazon sites (link below in references).
It is the book I felt I needed in the pre-pandemic days of COVID-19 when there was no guidance. Governments were still trying to wrap their heads around what was fair to ask of their citizens, and what was a step too far. Doctors and scientists were still trying to figure out mortality, treatments, and transmission.

There are decisions that are within our control. And some that are not. This book helps us focus on the former, and let go of the latter. And it helps us feel confident in the decisions we make while learning to roll with life’s inevitable punches. It is a set of guidelines and tools that give us a little more control in an ever-changing world.

Make. Take. Talk.

How will you interact with the information you have learned today? Here are some suggestions:

Make: a decision
  • Make a list of all your ups and downs in your parenting journey
  • Track a recent decision that went well. And another that could have gone better. 5 words each.
Take: an action
  • Take some time to journal your reflection on this post.
  • Read the book.
  • Sign up for the newsletter to learn about related activities and webinars.
Talk: share your learning
  • Share your thoughts on this topic with another parent.
  • Call your parents and discover more about their parenting journey – the highs and the lows.

 

CREDIT & THANKS; DEFINITIONS & RESOURCES:
2 Comments
  • Kathleen Martin
    Posted at 10:30h, 18 May Reply

    Check out this book! Karena deSouza is a mom who is so fascinated by how raising kids actually works that she applied her considerable business and analytical skills and intellect to that task. She’s looked at raising kids as a business case with the fundamental question: How do we raise kids—pack them full of love and skills and empathy and tolerance—for a world that is unpredictable at a scale that is off the charts from any other generation? Well. We make decisions. Every day. Lots of them. But—how do we position those decisions to include that future that so many people are terrified of thinking about—but that comes nonetheless? We make CALCULATED decisions. She tells her readers how she learned to do that—and makes herself and her family and their adventure around the world the case study. Contours of Courageous Parenting is a generous work by an author with a clear and earnest desire to be of service to others. Although helpful for new parents, I think this book is particularly inspiring for mid-career parents—during those years when so few other parenting books are aimed at us.

    • Karena de Souza
      Posted at 11:25h, 25 May Reply

      Wow! Thank you for this very insightful review, Kathleen. You seem to be able to step back and view my book and our journey through a very different lens. I am humbled.

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