Praise Our Chosen Family!

From “On Being” with Krista Tippett

In Praise of Chosen Family

BY COURTNEY E. MARTIN (@COURTWRITES), WEEKLY COLUMNIST

Kate is one of the first friends that I feel like I actually chose. I’d see her walking around campus, her thick, dark hair curling up around her headphones, her head bobbing. She was a DJ at the college radio station. She was in my human rights class with the ancient and erudite Professor Juviler.

She sat with a group of girls in the cafeteria who exuded a bravado that I craved as I sat with my calorie-counting crew. I admired her from a safe distance for a while, suspicious that I was probably too earnest for her. Then, one day, with my adolescent esteem on some erratic upswing, I decided to email her. I told her that she was amazing and that I wanted to be her friend. Talk about earnest.

To my surprise, she wrote back. We started hanging out. Fifteen years later, we trade late-night pep talk texts when sleep evades our baby daughters, problem shoot long writing projects, and take sun-dappled walks around Lake Merritt to hash the world out side by side.

It seems like a good moment to pause in praise of our chosen family, otherwise known as our friends.

imageCredit: Ewan McDowall License: Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).

The holidays can be a wonderful, horrible time for many people. We are reminded — over gelatinous fruitcake, no less — that, though we love our families, we may not always like our families. We frequently don’t see eye to eye — a life-giving force if we have the wherewithal to explore it. They often can’t give us what we need, whether that’s praise or space or just the simplest of utterances: I’m proud of you, I see you, I love you.

This is the nature of growing up and growing away, of being someone who sheds some legacies while embracing others, of turning a critical, albeit compassionate, eye on our origins. As common as it is, it never gets any less complicated. In part, this is because it’s not something to be solved. Instead, it’s an eternal equation (subtract an expectation here, add a realization here).

As a result, a lot of us swig some pretty hard serenity with our eggnog this time of year. And, of course, the holidays can be an even more difficult time for those who don’t have the profound gift of a family to fight with. Which is why it’s such an outrageous blessing to have the opportunity to choose our friends. In fact, I believe it’s one of the most important skills we can cultivate in a child — the ability to know how to feel out who we want to be friends with and initiate and cultivate relationships. Here’s hoping you have more subtle skills than my own dorky emails.

imageCredit: Bas Rogers License: Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).

But “cool” is not really the point here. We spend so much of our lives trying to impress people we don’t actually respect — deliberately making friends with people that we deeply admire, people that make us laugh our asses off, people that push us to be more ourselves, is an under-appreciated and radical act in this culture of performance and reverence for the wrong gods (effortless perfection and exacting efficiency, to name a couple).

The idea that I could actually choose my friends came surprisingly late in life. As a girl growing up in a tight-knit community, I saw friends as inherited, almost like family: the girl on my lacrosse team, the boy who lived down the street, the son of my mom’s best friend.

Maybe, when we’re young, this is true. We don’t have the same kind of independence or capacity for initiation as we do later on. And many of these inherited friends are lovely, sometimes even the ones we would have chosen, had we had the chance. (For the luckiest among us, family members are actually the ones we would have chosen, too.)

imageCredit: Shira Bea Cawaling License: Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

At a certain point, at least among the happiest people I know, we start to get really intentional about who we surround ourselves with. We grow unsatisfied with inheritance, with the sense that our friends are “happening to us.” We realize that we have been neglecting one of our most thrilling powers. We stop hanging out with people that make us feel like shit, just because we had the same first job at that bizarre summer camp. We have passionate friend crushes that make life infinitely more interesting.

It is our families that shape us from the very beginning, but it is our friends that truly define us down the road. They are the ones we get to invite into our lives.

So now that the family circus is over for another season and you’re turning your attention to the beginning of a new year, consider this for a resolution: become a fierce talent scout of amazing friends. Make your crew your finest act of curatorial courage. Just as many wise spiritual teachers have argued that our thoughts beget our actions, I would argue that our friends beget our culture. They become the force we measure ourselves against, the source of so much of our joy and courage. They are our respite, and our welcomed responsibility. And all that choosing makes for a very rich life.

imageCredit: John Fraissinet License: Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

CONTRIBUTOR

COURTNEY E. MARTIN is an author, entrepreneur, and speaker.

Family and the Technology Blues

The reality is that sometimes we get the technology blues.

I am the tech. person in our home, so I am in charge of monitoring all of the devices and making sure that everything is safe and appropriate.  It’s a big job.  I spend a lot of time learning the ropes of technology so I can be a media-savvy mom.  As much as I’d like to bury my head in the sand sometimes, I know that is not the right or brave thing to do.  I have to approach media issues with resolve – it is a huge part of parenting our kids in this generation.

It is one of the most impactful ways we can reclaim our homes.

So how can we be empowered as parents in the area of technology? Here are some ideas:

  1. Put a filter on every single device.Did you know that most computers have a feature that allows someone to do “private browsing?” That means that their history will not show up, because it is “private.” Many call this the “porn browser.” The same feature is available on Safari on the iPhone.  Many parents have no idea that their kids are viewing pornography because they are able to hide any traces of it through the hidden browsing option.

Here are some specific actions we take in our home to keep devices from being able to access inappropriate material, even if just by accident:

• Turn off  your usual browser (Safari, Google, Firefox).  Upload a secure browser, like Net Nanny or Covenant Eyes to all of your computers/tablets. These allow for safe browsing on the internet, while blocking inappropriate content. They do all of the filtering for you. Parents set the rating of what is allowed to come through on the internet.  It also sends a full report of websites visited.  Even if you don’t think anyone will view inappropriate material, it gives such peace of mind to know that no one will accidentally stumble upon pornography, or pop-ups that attempt to lure young people into places they shouldn’t go.

• Turn off “Add Apps” in the systems folder.  This will require your children to get approval for the apps they want to download.

  1. Stay on top of the current technological trends.An outstanding parent resource for media issues is called Common Sense Media.org. They cover a wide range of topics, and update parents on the latest and greatest.
  2. Use the same technology as your kids, and know their passwords.If your kids Snapchat, you Snapchat.  If they Instagram, you Instagram.  Learn the language so you can talk to your kids about them, monitor what is happening, and know how they work.  Get their passwords so you can get into their account if needed (hopefully you won’t need to).children-addicted-gadgets
  3. Create “media free” zones.It is healthy for all of us to have a break from constant connection.  Designate times of the day or places where no technology is allowed (make sure that the parents abide by this also).  For us, one of those places is the dinner table. We also strongly discourage the use of technology when we are all together as a family or as extended family.
  4. Put boundaries on usage.Kids do not need to have their devices with them at all times.  In fact, it is important for them to learn how to set them down.  Each family must decide for themselves what those boundaries will be, but don’t be afraid to make them.  For example, we still have phones turned in at night (parents included).  This is something that we feel strongly about for several reasons, the most important being a good night’s rest.
  5. Spot check.One of our house rules is that parents can check the devices at any time.  It’s important for us to keep tabs on what is happening in this virtual world with our kids and that is one way to know.
  6. Educate your children on media literacy. This is simply teaching them about cyber bullying, sexting, subtweeting, and all of the other issues that can accompany exposure to media.IgnoringKids
  7.  Love the people right in front of you. Make it a general rule that the people who are present in real life take priority over those who are not present.
  8. Talk about important issues in person. If you’ve ever had an email that unintentionally created conflict with another person, you understand why.  There are no facial expressions, vocal tones, or non-verbal communication indicators when you communicate via messaging.  So much gets lost in translation, and on delicate issues, there is an even greater potential for damage.
  9. Be Brave. I know that all of this can be hard.  And kids push and push, wanting more and more freedom with technology.  But believe it or not, children do better when there are limits. Research shows that kids benefit significantly with boundaries.  Long term, it impacts them positively and keeps them out of trouble.  When children and teens push back, remember this and have the courage to say “no.”

Todays Dare:

Pick one area listed above and implement it into your home right now!

Source:

Krista Gilbert at meaninginaminute.com