by James Lehman, MSW
If
you and your spouse take opposing roles in dealing with your kids,
you’re not alone. Many parents take on the roles of “good cop” and “bad
cop” in the family. For instance, Dad is the kid’s best buddy, and mom
is the nag. Or dad is strict and mom is a sympathizer.
Which “cop” is right? And should you be a cop at all?
I see two problems with the notion of
good cop/bad cop parenting. First, is the very idea that somebody has to
be a “cop” all the time. Parents don’t need to be cops. They simply
need to be coaches and teachers for their children.
Second, what’s really happening when
parents become good cops and bad cops is that the kids have learned to
split their parents. The area of the split is where kids go to get out
of meeting their responsibilities.
For example, Tommy goes to mom and says,
“Dad’s making me clean my room before we go to the mall.” Or he says to
mom, “Why do I have to clean my room? Dad doesn’t make me do it.” When
your child makes complaints like this, both parents have to be
supportive of each other. You have to be able to say, “These are the
rules Dad and I both have, and you have to do it or you’re going to be
held responsible for the consequences.” Then turn around and walk away.
That’s it. Give simple statements of support. The more unified you are
as parents, the more likely your child is to complete his
responsibilities, because he doesn’t have another way out. The only way
out is to act responsibly and do what’s asked of him.
But what if you don’t really agree with
what Dad is asking Tommy to do? If you have a problem with a rule or
limit your spouse sets or a request that’s being made of your kid, don’t
make a face. Don’t sigh. And, by all means, don’t argue with your
spouse about the issue in front of the child…or even indicate that you
are going to argue. Just tell your child he has to do what’s been asked
of him. Then talk with your spouse later, after the kids have gone to
bed and out of earshot. This is important, because kids pick up on
non-verbal cues from their parents a lot more than you think. If your
child sees that you disagree with what’s being asked of him, he’ll bring
up the issue again and again, to split you and your spouse and to avoid
meeting the responsibility.
Simple statements of support work when
you use them consistently. When Tommy complains that Dad won’t let him
play Runescape before he does his homework, and you say, “Your father
said you can’t play Runescape until you do your homework. That’s the
rule,” you can bet Tommy will stop trying to split you and your spouse.
Good Cop/Bad Cop Parenting reprinted with permission from Empowering Parents. For more information, visit www.empoweringparents.com
James Lehman, MSW was a renowned child behavioral therapist who worked with struggling teens and children for three decades. He created the Total Transformation Program to help people parent more effectively. James' foremost goal was to help kids and to "empower parents." |
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