When I had a 6-week-old infant and a 3-year-old son I
started social work school. It was
challenging to parent young children and be in graduate school but I was
fortunate to be able to do it part time, and like all parents I juggled my
different commitments.
In the mandatory Human
Development class, which covered birth to death, I learned about all the
major theories of child development.
It was daunting to be aware of all these important impacts of parenting
while I was so busy juggling life with two young children. So I vividly remember sighing a deep
sigh of relief when we learned two aspects of child development profoundly
reassuring and comforting: “good enough mothering”, and “necessary empathic
failure”.
Donald W. Winnicott in The Child, the Family, and the Outside World (Middlesex 1973) talked about the idea of “good enough”
mothering. He wrote specifically
about mothering in the context of his times, which didn’t include the concept
of fathers’ involvement or the idea of other caregivers. I will use an expanded version of “good
enough” parenting to include all of them.
The idea is that
there is no need or ultimately even no desire for parents to be perfect at what
they do. Parents need to be loving
towards their children, to try and become attuned to their communications and
needs, and of course to keep them safe.
However, parents can’t always succeed in anticipating needs and addressing
them and more than that-they shouldn’t!
In fact it is
when we are not able to meet every need, in the context of a safe and loving
environment that the baby and then the young child begins to build important skills
like soothing themselves and being able to fall asleep. It allows them to be able to develop
some age appropriate separation from their parents. This leads to children learning to tolerate disappointment
and develop problem-solving skills for themselves. Heinz Kohut the founder of self-psychology referred to this
concept as “necessary empathic failure”.
When we are
present and attuned most of the time, the child learns to trust that her
parents will be there for her and that the world is a safe place. Then when she
experiences some disappointment or mis-attunement in a given instance, she is
able to trust that everything will ultimately be okay and in that context begin
to develop her own skills in soothing herself. Thus these lapses are necessary empathic failures.
In our culture
today there is a strong tendency towards parents aiming for perfection, and for
meeting children’s needs as fully and immediately as people. This continues even after the
infant years in the idea that children have to have the “important toys”, go to
the best specific preschools, cultivate numerous extracurricular activities, do
the best on standardized tests… the list is long and seemingly endless. One of the sad by-products of this
pressure is that parents judge themselves harshly if they feel they are not
providing all these things. They can also put undue pressure on their children
to always excel.
The reality is there
is no way to be a perfect parent and in fact it would be detrimental to the
child if we were perfect. We need
to have those small lapses in empathy and attunement in order that our children
develop vital capabilities of self-soothing, learn how to tolerate
disappointment and build problem solving skills.
With most of us
juggling work, school, children, caring for elderly parents, community
responsibilities, some of us single parenting, we can’t meet every need of our
child. We can take comfort in the
fact that as long as we are loving, attentive when we can be, provide a safe
environment, we are doing a good enough job. Our children will grow, and thrive, and develop the needed
skills to become safe, happy, independent adults.