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Published - Saturday, June 30, 2007

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Rosemond: Boy doesn’t want a kiss goodnight? Then back off


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Q: Our 6-year-old son, who was a 30-week preemie, does not receive affection very well, only when initiated by him, which is not often. He is a middle child and his behavior has become a bigger struggle with the birth of the third son, whom he likes to openly reject. At bedtime, specifically, he will purposefully hide under the blankets and react angrily if I force a kiss on him.

My dilemma is that I don’t know if I should leave it alone and hope he will come out of it or if I should, as I have been doing, kiss him anyway so he knows no matter what that he is loved. On the other hand, he is the child that brings me flowers and during school activities/performances makes sure my focus is only on him. I feel sad when I allow him not to get the goodnight love. Am I taking it too personally?
A: In the 1960s, comedian David Steinberg did a skit in which he played a psychiatrist. He would begin every session by telling his patient, in a mock German accent, “Unt vemember! Everyzing counts!’’ In that regard, I am fascinated you felt it necessary and/or relevant to tell me this child was born prematurely. That surely has nothing to do with his not wanting to kiss you goodnight, but I’m sure Herr Doctor Steinberg would agree the fact you felt the need to mention it certainly counts. It says you are highly anxious about this child, and have been since he was born. It says you read significance into even the most trivial of his behaviors.

Currently, all of this anxiety and obsessing is focused on the matter of his refusal to kiss you at bedtime. So, I have to wonder: If I help you release yourself from the bondage of desperately wanting him to return your bedtime kiss, what will you begin obsessing about next?

Yes, you are taking this much too personally. Your son, furthermore, is most definitely aware that you are taking this very personally and that getting a kiss at bedtime has taken on apocalyptic importance to you. In so doing, you have given him power, and children don’t know how to handle power over adults. It confuses them at the same time it intoxicates them. So, they inevitably abuse it. They use it rudely, arrogantly, belligerently and self-centeredly.

Pulling the blanket up over his head and refusing to accept a kiss from you is all of those things. In short, your son is working this situation for all it’s worth, and who, truly, can blame him.

I’m going to speculate that six years of anxiety has become stifling to your son’s sense of independence. It must be oppressive to be the focus of so much attention, after all, especially when the attention in question takes the form of lots of hand-wringing over the most trivial of things. I’m getting around to telling you that the solution to this “problem’’ lies with you backing off, relaxing and letting things begin to take their natural course.

In that regard, I advise you to simply tell him, rather casually, one day (this afternoon perhaps?), “Oh, I almost forgot to tell you. I’ve decided you are big enough and responsible enough to begin putting yourself to bed without anyone’s help. Furthermore, it’s fairly obvious that this is what you want. So, I’m not going to put you to bed any longer, beginning tonight. This is a great privilege, and I know that you’re going to handle it responsibly.’’

And then turn back, nonchalantly, to whatever it was you were doing, thus closing the book on that chapter in your life with him.

And then, for your own sake, as well as his, stop thinking of him as a 30-week preemie.

He’s a 6-year-old little boy who needs his mom to stop worrying about him.

Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents’ questions on his Web site at www.rosemond.com.
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P.S. from just a mom wrote on Jun 30, 2007 11:11 PM:

" The boy in this story my never say I love you or ask for kisses and hugs, but that doesn't mean he doesn't need them. Keep telling and showing your child that you love him, every day. "

Just a Mom of 3 wrote on Jun 30, 2007 11:04 PM:

" Shame on the author of the response to this parent. Has the author every thought of being a parent? I have 3 children: girl, boy, girl, in birth order. My oldest daughter is 11 and insists I visit her each night at bedtime. I kiss and hug her, she only hugs in return. NO big deal. Why? She tells me, of her own accord, that she loves me at least 5 times a day. Why, because I've been telling her I love her many times a day, since the day she was born!! To the parent of this article, don't sweat the kisses, just keep telling your kids you love them, every day. "

Preference wrote on Jun 24, 2007 10:00 AM:

" My son was born 12 weeks premature. He is 19 now. He still kisses me goodnight and says I love before being dropped off somewhere. I think it is a matter or preference. My 12 year old would rather throw up than have me kiss him! LOL BOYS, it is a preference. "

Ummm wrote on Jun 24, 2007 9:31 AM:

" Harsh much? I'll agree she is probably making too much of the kissing thing. C'mon he's a boy that is to be expected. My son went through the same thing and now he makes sure HE kisses ME! (He's 7) If we are talking about reading too much into things I think Mr. Rosmond is taking a tiny little thing like '30-week premie' and reading a lot of significance in to it where there might not be any. Mom don't worry so much? :) When have mothers ever been able to follow that sage advice? I wish her luck nonetheless. "


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