Moderating Mom's Behavior

When a parent is consistently too harsh with her kids, a family therapist can help to restore a happier, healthier family life.
Q
My wife is harsh in verbal and body language to her boys when they do things she doesn't like. For example, if they don't wash the dishes within a short period of time, she gets angry and starts shouting and threatening. She comes from a family where her father was very controlling and she also did not have any brothers her age to interact with. She is not this way at all with her six-year- old daughter, who was born with Downs Syndrome. She became very harsh and hard on the boys when they became approximately six and seven years old, even though I've tried to discuss the situation and get her to moderate her behavior.
A

This is a difficult parenting (and husband and wife ) situation for you. I am sure your wife will not allow herself to be harsh and demanding to her daughter. How could she be angry and yell at this "special child" who doesn't know any better. Your boys clearly get mixed messages from your wife and you in terms of acceptable behavior, punishment and your overall attitude towards them. I'm sure she sees you as the permissive "good guy" whose behavior makes her the "bad guy".

If you can't come to a shared, consistent view on how to parent your sons, you are not giving them what they deserve. If I thought you were just talking about a difference in style ( like your wife is a little more humorous than you when she disciplines the boys) I wouldn't be concerned. But your letter suggests a fundamental difference in what you both expect from them as members of your family and how you treat them as human beings. I appreciate your attempts to understand your wife's behavior through her own family's dysfunctionality; that shows you're more interested in understanding her and changing the pattern than you are in blaming her and perpetuating he pattern.

Could you use that same non-blaming attitude and suggest to her that you see a family therapist together so that your sons and the both of you can live a happier, healthier family life? Don't present it as her problem; present it as a family problem that you two need some help with. If you can get her to agree to go, based on this not being about "ganging up "on her in a therapist's office but about everyone being happier, you may also raise the issue of how difficult it is for your sons to be the siblings of a Down Syndrome sister. Your sons may be harboring a lot of guilt and anger regarding their sister and how she is treated in the family; it would be wonderful if they could find an objective, supportive forum to discuss these and other difficulties they're having. If all this does not and cannot come to pass, you need to seek out help for yourself and your sons. Good luck.

Carleton Kendrick has been in private practice as a family therapist and has worked as a consultant for more than 20 years. He has conducted parenting seminars on topics ranging from how to discipline toddlers to how to stay connected with teenagers. Kendrick has appeared as an expert on national broadcast media such as CBS, Fox Television Network, Cable News Network, CNBC, PBS, and National Public Radio. In addition, he's been quoted in the New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Boston Globe, USA Today, Reader's Digest, BusinessWeek, Good Housekeeping, Woman's Day, and many other publications.

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