For those of us who are aware of the issues that threaten people, animals and
our planet – such as sweatshops, child labor, slavery, war, poverty, oppressive
governments, over- consumption, habitat destruction, inefficient use of
non-renewable resources and industrialized agriculture – parenthood poses a
unique set of challenges. Many people agree that these and other issues must be
addressed quickly, but they can seem large and impossible to change,
particularly in light of the busy lives we lead as parents. On the other hand,
we have a very real and personal stake in seeing that these problems get solved
for the sake of our children and their children. Humane Parenting gives us some
easy-to-implement ideas for ways we can help find everyday solutions to these
dilemmas.
Humane Parenting is part of the growing Humane Education movement, which seeks
to understand the connections among education, human rights, consumerism and
culture, environmentalism and animal protection. The ideas and techniques used
in Humane Parenting give us, as our children’s first teachers, some tools we can
use to help us raise global citizens who will be the leaders of tomorrow.
Before we ask how we can practice Humane Parenting, we have to consider what we
mean by the word “humane.” If we define this word as “exhibiting the best
qualities of human beings,” then we can consider the character traits that we
value most in ourselves and the people around us, and that we most want to
cultivate in our sons and daughters. Most people, when asked this question, name
characteristics such as kindness, creativity, patience, open-mindedness,
compassion, empathy, intelligence and helpfulness. Humane Parenting challenges
us not only to teach our children ways to exhibit these qualities in relation to
their families, friends and communities, but also to Earth and all the beings
who live here.
As set out by Humane Education pioneer Zoe Weil, Humane Parenting uses the
following elements:
Provide Accurate Information
In order to find solutions to complex problems, we need to make the effort to
understand the problems. We need to get our information from a variety of
sources so that we can appreciate the multiple perspectives that are an
inevitable part of life. However, for busy parents and caretakers this can often
be the most challenging part of Humane Parenting. It is difficult to find the
time to complete the myriad tasks we must attend to every day just to keep our
families functioning, never mind carving out hours for research on things that
often do not seem to have an immediate relevance in our lives. However, living
consciously and learning what we can about the world around us sets an important example for our children and allows us to live fuller lives in
accordance with our values.
One thing we must guard against as parents is giving our children too much
information before they are ready for it. Consider a story that a friend
recently told me about a trip to our local soup kitchen. She had been
volunteering there for years and decided that it was time to bring her
four-year-old son with her. However, when they left at the end of their shift,
she was surprised to find that her son was not feeling grateful for the
comfortable life he leads. Instead, he was terrified that some stroke of bad
luck might befall his own family, making them homeless and hungry like the
people he had met that night. Adults often feel hopeless and discouraged in the
face of information about things like corporate greed, the AIDS crisis in Africa
or oil spills in the Arctic. Now imagine how afraid and anxious young children
probably feel when faced with the same information. Our goal is for our children
to feel safe and empowered, not disheartened and disconnected.
Though every child is different, it has been suggested that most children do not
possess the intellectual and emotional sophistication to process information
about global and human rights tragedies until they are at least ten years old.
There are some highly visible examples of some extraordinary children who are
ready to deal with these issues at a younger age, such as Ryan Hreljac, who
founded Ryan’s Well to help provide clean water to impoverished people around
the globe at age six and Craig Kielburger who helped found Free the Children and
toured southeastern Asia at age 12, learning about child labor and meeting such
people as Mother Theresa and the Prime Minister of Canada. However, for most
children it is best to save the current events lessons until they are
sufficiently mature to handle them and, instead, act as a role model, taking the
time to learn about the issues that are important to you.
Refine the Three Rs
Many of us grew up with the three Rs of reading, writing and arithmetic, but
Humane Parenting asks us to consider a different set of lessons – reverence,
respect and responsibility. If we are able to help our children develop
reverence for the world around them, or at least to respect those parts that
they do not necessarily revere, they are more likely to act responsibly. If we
can teach our children to love themselves, other people, animals and the planet,
and to value the role that every being plays in the functioning of the system,
then it will be that much easier for them to see it as their job to protect and
preserve it.
When we try to help our children learn about the world around them, we need to
be very careful about the messages that we send them. Recently, someone on an
email list posted that she had taken her children out to collect acorns and had
so many extras that she was willing to ship them to anyone who wanted them.
There are two things about this that are bothersome.
Richard Louv quotes a Native American saying in his book Last Child in the
Woods: “It is better to know one mountain than to visit many mountains.” In
other words, if we are trying to teach our children about Nature, the best place
to start is our own backyards, examining what is familiar to us. If we are
trying to refine the Three Rs for our children, particularly when they are
young, it is better to go outside and look at what grows in our own communities
than to have Nature shipped in from afar.
More worrisome, though, is the message of domination over Nature that was
conveyed by the acorn collection activity. Any effort to get children outside
and paying attention to the details of their surroundings is good. However, a
vital element of these activities is learning that everything that exists in
Nature has a purpose right where it is. In the case of the acorns, they fall
from the trees to become food for the squirrels and chipmunks who will bury them
to be eaten during lean times. The ones that are not dug back up will grow and
replace any trees that have fallen due to disease, severe winds or lightning
strikes. It is only through this cycle of Nature that trees continue to give us
more acorns to look at, as well as giving animals the resources they need to
survive and adding oxygen to the atmosphere. By collecting acorns for no purpose
other than the sake of collecting them, we send the message that they are ours
for the taking.
This is not to say that we can never take anything from Nature; indeed, we need
to take things to survive. However, when we do decide to take things from the
natural world, it is our responsibility to ensure that we take only as much as
we can use, and that we do it consciously and with gratitude.
Recently, on a trip to Florida, my daughter was fascinated by the fact that the
long, thin acorns she saw there differed so much from the short, fat acorns that
we have in the northeast. I permitted her to take a couple of them home for the
sake of comparison, but then reminded her that we could not take any more
because the animals in Florida needed them for food, which she easily accepted.
Cultivate the Three Cs
Just as important as helping our children to develop the emotional connections
to their world that will inspire them to act conscientiously is teaching them
how to think about problems and develop innovative solutions. Once our children
are motivated to help solve the many troubles in the world, they need the tools
that will help them understand the problems, evaluate the reasons these problems
exist, think of innovative ways to address the problems and, finally, they will
need the tools to decide which of these solutions are worth pursuing. The three
Cs of curiosity, creativity and critical thinking help them to do this.
Again, modeling is a crucial element of developing these qualities in our
children. However, many of us inadvertently
thwart opportunities in our everyday lives to help our children cultivate
their minds. Several months ago, my daughter and I were taking a walk with a
friend and her son. My daughter was distracted by the sound of frogs and walked
over to see several of them by the edge of the water. “Look at the frogs by the
pond!” she exclaimed excitedly, to which my friend replied, “That’s not a pond,
that’s a vernal pool.” Perhaps I should be embarrassed to admit this, but I had
no idea what a vernal pool was any more than my daughter did. I realize that my
friend, a devoted naturalist and environmentalist, was trying to help my
daughter widen her knowledge of the natural world. However, what happened was
that my young child was confused and distracted from the important thing, which
was admiring the frogs and their beautiful songs.
Of course, we need to give our children the vocabulary they need to talk about
the world around them. Sometimes, they are only looking for a simple answer to a
question about something they see. However, we are wise to guard against our
natural impulse to offer an immediate answer to every question they ask, and to
fill their time with a play-by-play commentary about what is around them. As
Alfred North Whitehead said, “When you name something, you tend to stop thinking
about it.” Our children need the time, the silence and the mental space to think
and learn things for themselves.
Provide Positive Choices
Modeling positive lifestyle choices for our children is the most powerful and
straightforward way we can teach them about what we believe in. No amount of
lecturing and learning about the issues of human rights, consumerism,
environmentalism and animal welfare will do much to influence our children if we
do not put our knowledge into action. Many parents would agree that charity
starts at home with watering a neighbor’s plants while he is on vacation,
shoveling the driveway for a friend who is in ill-health or preparing meals for
someone in our community who is having a difficult time. Humane Parenting asks
us to look beyond traditional ideas about community service, finding ways to
also serve the global community through our everyday actions.
Every family has different resources, different priorities and different
interpretations of the best way to have a positive impact on the world. Some
people will be drawn to a vegan or vegetarian lifestyle after examining the
issues addressed by Humane Parenting. Others will choose to eat locally-raised
meat, vegetables and dairy products or perhaps they will choose wild-caught
fish. Humane Parenting is not about a certain way of doing things, but is simply
a call to identify our values, examine our choices and make active, conscious
decisions about our actions.
When we act as passive bystanders who have no control over what happens around
us, we pass that attitude down to our children. When we act as educated,
powerful contributors who can use our dollars, our votes and our voices to
change the world for the better, then that is the attitude that our children
inherit from us. They may not make exactly the same choices we would, but that
is fine – even experts often disagree about the best ways to implement change.
What we want is for them to care about people, animals and the planet, and for
them to feel empowered to live their values.
Practice Positive Parenting
In order to raise humane children, we need to raise our children humanely. It
should be clear that Humane Parenting is all about raising children who are
confident, caring and independent. In order to do this, we must treat them
respectfully from the start, recognizing that the experience and knowledge that
we possess by virtue of our age does not mean that our needs are more important
than those of our children, nor does it mean that our opinions are necessarily
more valid. There are many positive parenting philosophies that we can draw from
to find a style that speaks to us and works for our family. When we begin to
practice this type of thoughtfulness with our children and partners, it becomes
easier to act courteously towards everyone we meet and, as a result, we are able
to better model the type of compassionate treatment of others that we are
looking to instill in our children.
In their book Respectful Parents, Respectful Kids, Sura Hart and Victoria Kindle
Hodson say, “The way that you parent will affect not only your child, but the
lives of hundreds and perhaps thousands of people in your child’s future. You
don’t have a choice about whether or not to affect the net of interdependence;
however, you do have a choice about how you affect it.” Though they were not
necessarily referring to the principles of Humane Parenting as they have been
laid out here, this sentiment applies perfectly to what we are trying to
accomplish.
The way we choose to live our lives affects so many people, as well as
non-humans and the planet itself. We will never know even a fraction of the
impact we have on the world in terms of the laborers who create the things we
use, the resources we consume and the waste we produce, and the animals who lose
their homes and their lives to accommodate us. Especially among the relatively
wealthy people living in the affluent countries of North America and Europe, all
of our choices take a huge toll on the planet and all its inhabitants. If we, as
parents, want our children to live in a world that is peaceful and sustainable,
then it is vital that we begin to consider our impact on a global scale and that
we raise our children to do the same.
Kelly Coyle DiNorcia lives in New Jersey with husband John,
daughter Bess (5/05), son Harry (5/08) and a four-footed menagerie. She spends
her time washing sippy cups and small people, having tickle fights and snuggle
fests – and when she’s not doing that, she’s likely reading, writing, blogging
or connecting with other like-minded parents.
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