by Jane Bluestein, Ph.D.
"I
love you". Can any words possibly
sound sweeter or offer greater comfort?
Is any statement more natural--or
necessary--between a parent and
child? In many families, these words
come easily. But if you grew up
never hearing them, saying "I
love you" may feel somewhat
unnatural to you. Or if members
of your family used loving statements
to control or manipulate, you may
be very uncomfortable using them
with your own children. Many families
either don't communicate loving
feelings very often or they communicate
them in destructive ways.
A
counselor friend once told me she
was appalled to discover that some
of her clients had never heard the
words, "I love you" from
their parents: "I couldn't
imagine parents who couldn't say
'I love you' to their children,
probably because I grew up hearing
it all the time. But in the middle
of my shock and self-righteousness,
I realized that in my family, that
statement was always loaded with
expectations for me to do something.
Most of the time when my parents
said 'I love you' they would stand
there and wait for us to say 'I
love you, too'. So that statement
always came off as a solicitation,
rather than an expression of how
they really felt about us."
If either of these extremes describe
your upbringing, chances are, you
aren't using loving statements as
often--or as "cleanly"--as
you might.
A
few simple guidelines can help.
Let's hear it! We all need to hear
loving statements from people we
care about. It may be easy to assume
that your kids know you love them.
After all, you do love them and
you probably do a lot of loving
things for them. That's important.
But feeling love for someone is
not the same as expressing it. Nor
is doing loving things. Loving feelings
and loving behaviors are not loving
words--and those are important,
too. If you find it hard to get
the words out of your mouth, either
from lack of familiarity or fear
of rejection, start slowly.
A
parent in one of my workshops confessed
to practicing on the dog for a few
days before she could get up the
nerve to try it out on her kids!
Another started by Writing love
notes to her children, sneaking
them into their lunch bags or under
their pillows. Both reported such
a strong, positive response from
their children, that saying "I
love you" came much more easily
after that. Let's hear it some more.
None of this "I-told-you-I-love-you-in-1985"
stuff, OK? This isn't like going
to the dentist twice a year. So
maybe it's still not easy to say,
even with the practice and little
successes. Maybe hearing "I
love you" even gives your kids
the creeps (this is more age specific
than anything else and less likely
to happen if you don't say it in
front of his entire 5th grade class).
Say it anyhow. As a gift to yourself,
communicate your love daily. At
least. Keep it simple! "I love
you" is a complete sentence.
We
don't need to tie our feelings for
a person to the person's behavior.
In fact, whenever we connect it
to something the other person has
done, "I love you" becomes
a statement of conditional caring.
"I love you when you make your
bed", or "I love you when
you make the honor roll", suggest
that you love your child because
of his behavior or accomplishment.
It also suggests that the love wouldn't
be there--or be quite the same--if
the child hadn't made the bed or
the grades. (Don't you love your
kid in either case?) You can still
be excited and happy about the behavior,
but avoid communicating that your
loving feelings for your child exist
because he's doing what pleases
you. "I love you". Period.
No "buts" about it! By
the same token, watch the tendency
to use "I love you" as
a lead-in to a confrontation about
something your child has done that
you find disturbing. If you need
to address the child's behavior
or set a boundary, by all means
do so. But deal with the behavior--not
the worth of the child, or your
feelings for him or her. If the
child needs to clean her room or
miss the movie because her chores
were not done, deal with the situation,
not your feelings. You don't need
to say, "I love you but..."
to soften the blow. Your feelings
are not an issue here. Besides,
because of the way the brain processes
the words we hear, whatever you
say before the word "but"
automatically gets canceled out
anyhow. (In other words, if you
say, "I love you, but your
room is a mess," all the child
ends up hearing is, "Your room
is a mess.") Using "but"
in the same sentence as "I
love you" is confusing and
manipulative. As in the previous
example, this type of statement
suggests that the child is only
lovable conditionally. Cut to the
chase.
Avoid
tying the feelings you express to
the way the child is acting--good
or bad. No expectations. Say "I
love you" because you want
to say "I love you." Say
it because you feel love toward
the person you're talking to. Say
it because it feels good to say
it. "I love you" is a
powerful statement and lots of times
it will evoke a loving response
from the recipient. But attaching
an expectation for a response to
the statement is a set-up--both
for you and the other person. If
the expectation is there, your child
will know it. If he does respond,
it will probably be to avoid guilt
or conflict rather than genuine,
spontaneous caring. Is that what
you really want? If your children
haven't learned how to say "I
love you" yet, it's OK to tell
them that you need to hear those
three little words sometimes, too.
Then give them some space to risk,
practice and learn. By far their
best lessons will come from your
own unconditional modeling. Turn
the love inward. Next to unconditional
love, the best gift you can give
another person is the love you give
yourself! In fact the ability to
love, appreciate and care for yourself
is essential to healthy, loving
relationships with others.
So,
look in the mirror. Look into your
eyes. Say "I love you."
No "buts." No qualifiers.
Say it out loud. Say it often. Mean
it. What better way to affirm how
worthwhile and lovable you are.
And what better way to practice
one of the most basic, most precious
and important parenting skills there
is.