Ten Best Parenting Quotes

Parenting is one of those jobs that most of us don’t have a clue about until we have our first child.  Somehow we feel that we will know what to do “naturally.” In some ways this may be true,  but in others, it is absolutely false.  Some mothers, for example, take to breast feeding quite easily.  Others have to be taught about getting the baby “latched on” the right way.  Others yet just choose to bottle-feed.

Just as there are many ways to feed, so there are many ways to raise a child and to be a parent.   Parenting styles differ and  parents are all different personalities.  Even the best parents make mistakes and we’re not as patient, understanding, and tolerant as we sometimes might like to be.  Some of us have gentle ways and some of us are demanding.   As I look back at my parenting, I regret that I  didn’t consciously go about learning skills on how to be a good parent before my child was born.

Scientific American Mind, had an article called “What Makes A Good Parent,” by well-known psychologist, Robert Epstein,  in its November, 2010 issue.  Here are 10 essential parenting skills listed in that article.  It may be helpful to new parents on the look-out for information.

  • Love and affection.  “You support and accept the child, are physically affectionate, and spend quality one-on-one time together.”
  • Stress Management.  “You take steps to reduce stress for yourself and your child, practice relaxation techniques, and promote positive interpretations of events.”
  • Relationship skills.  “You maintain a healthy relationship with your spouse, significant o ther, or co-parent and model effective relationship skills with others.”
  • Autonomy and Independence.  “You treat your child with respect and encourage him or her to become self-sufficient and self-reliant.”
  • Education and learning.  “You promote and model learning and provide educational opportunities for your child.”
  • Life skills.  “You provide for your child, have a steady income, and plan for the future.”
  • Behavior management.  “You make extensive use of positive reinforcement and punish only when other methods of managing behavior have failed.”
  • Health.  “You model a healthy lifestyle and good habits, such as regular exercise and proper nutrition.”
  • Religion.  “You support spiritual or religious development and participate in spiritual or religious activities.”
  • Safety.  “You take precautions to protect your child and maintain awareness of the child’s activities and friends.”

It’s a good list that covers many important aspects of life and learning and since I’m not a parenting authority, I thought it would be a good addition to this post.  Below are ten quotes on parenting that, in my opinion, are the best ones.

 

1.  “There are many times as a parent when you realize that your job is not to be the parent you always imagined you’d be, the parent you always wished you had. Your job is to be the parent your child needs, given the particulars of his or her own life and nature.”Ayelet Waldman

2.  I learned that life is about the people around you and the people you give back to. That’s what parenting is: You’re not there for yourself; you’re there for your offspring and everyone else around you. – Conrad Anker

3.  For me, conscious parenting is staying attuned to your child, being really open and in the moment.  It means staying as present as possible in your own breath for the betterment of your whole family. ~ Anna Getty

4. “Fathers and mothers have lost the idea that the highest aspiration they might have for their children is for them to be wise—-as priests, prophets or philosophers are wise. Specialized competence and success are all that they can imagine.”Allan Bloom
5. “We must return to optimism in our parenting. To focus on the joys, not the hassles; the love, not the disappointments; the common sense, not the complexities.” Fred G. Gosman
6.  Children do not enter this world with bad intentions. The do not come to wear us out, test our patience, or push us over the edge. They come to us with a need for love, connection, and belonging.  – Rebecca Eanes
7.  We must help the child to act for himself, will for himself, think for himself; this is the art of those who aspire to serve the spirit.” Maria
Montessori, Education for a New World 
8.  Parenting has nothing to do with perfection. Perfection isn’t even the goal, not for us, not for our children. Learning together to live well in an imperfect world, loving each other despite or even because of our imperfections, and growing as humans while we grow our little humans, those are the goals of gentle parenting. So don’t ask yourself at the end of the day if you did everything right. Ask yourself what you learned and how well you loved, then grow from your answer. That is perfect parenting.”  L.R. Knost
9.  “It’s not only children who grow. Parents do too. As much as we watch to see what our children do with their lives, they are watching us to see what we do with ours. I can’t tell my children to reach for the sun. All I can do is reach for it, myself.” Joyce Maynard
10.  Too much love never spoils children. Children become spoiled when we substitute ‘presents’ for presence – Anthony Witham
Sisters hugging their new baby brother