March Madness
Every psychologist knows that there are certain times of the year when the phone starts ringing like mad. Winter holidays are one of those times when people’s hopes for idyllic family reunions often meets the reality of your uncle who drinks too much, your siblings who reliably don’t show up or your mother who thinks you married “down.” Most of us in the mental health profession stay close to our offices between Christmas and New Years, anticipating teary, disappointed calls from adults who find, once again, that their Norman Rockwell visions have turned into Edvard Munch’s The Scream. For decades, this was the toughest time of year for both patients (well, many people actually) and therapists, when old hurts, disappointments and wounds unexpectedly reappeared, often taking center stage.
But times have changed and we have a new contender for the
emotionally toughest time of year – and that is March – when college
acceptances and rejections come in. What is profoundly different about
this difficult time from what I described above is that, for the most
part, it is unnecessary and fabricated not out of real trauma, but
manufactured trauma. My phone rings this morning at 8AM (right after
mail delivery) and a sobbing mother relates how her son was just
rejected from “ the only school we wanted.” The first thing to note of
course is the “we.” I’m assuming it’s her son who is going to college
and not the whole family. But like many of these phone calls, the
bleeding between the needs of the high schooler and the needs of the
parents, practically needs a tourniquet. Parents are beside themselves
about rejections that are incidental to their children; children are
beside themselves about disappointing their parents. The normal level of
excitement and disappointment that one would expect at this point is so
out of proportion to the reality of what it means to go to Wisconsin
instead of Michigan, Georgetown instead of Princeton, Santa Cruz instead
of UCLA or Sonoma State instead of San Jose State as to defy easy
explanation. So here’s my best shot at what is really going on during March Madness.
First of all, we’ve come to believe that where our children go to
college will have a profound impact on how their lives turn out. There
are companies that “guarantee” admission to a prestigious college if you
start working with them while your child is still a toddler. Many
schools begin college preparation in 6th grade and even more in 9th.
This emphasis lets our children (and ourselves) know early and
regularly that high school and even childhood are staging areas for
something that will happen years, even decades later. In fact, both
childhood and adolescence have a whole bunch of requirements of their
own that have nothing to do with where your child ultimately goes to
college. Long before that happens, they need to show self-control, get
interested in themselves and the world, know how to talk and work with
other people and reflect on their future selves. Premature focus on
college takes away much needed time from the tasks and skills that kids
need to master in order to go on and be successful college students, and
then successful adults.
So does the college that your child goes to matter? Yes, of course.
But not necessarily in the way we’ve become accustomed to thinking
about it. Colleges and universities matter when they fit well with the
needs, interests and temperament of your child. The child who thrives in
a big social setting is unlikely to do well in a small rural school.
The child who loves structure, may struggle with a school where there
are few requirements. College is a match, not a prize. We have our eye
on the wrong ball when we care most about the “ranking” of the college
our child goes to. Academically talented kids, for the most part, go to
competitive schools. But these handful of top schools can fill their
classes many times over with bright kids. No kid should feel like a
failure (another typical March phone call – a crying youngster who won’t
get out of bed saying “I did everything right and it was for nothing.”)
It is a tragedy to have high performing kids feel like failures when
they don’t get into the toughest schools. It is equally a tragedy to
marginalize kids who go to community colleges. “It’s tough to make
predictions, especially about the future,” said Yogi Berra. Few of us
have walked a straight and narrow path to “success.” Many of us have
changed focus, schools and careers. We should know better. There are few
individual things that will determine our life’s trajectory. Life is
simply more complex than that. No school guarantees success in life and
no school eliminates it.
Instead of crying over rejections, we should be celebrating
acceptances with our kids in March. Of course going to a high-ranking
school may carry potential advantages. But an Ivy League study showed
that there were no ultimate differences in workplace success or
satisfaction among students who were accepted to Ivy League schools and
attended and those who were accepted but didn’t go there. Ultimately it
is your child’s life. The best guarantees of success for our children –
not at the end of the grading period, not when they get into college –
but twenty years down the line when they move into their adult lives,
have to do with real involvement with learning (not just going through
the motions,) a good emotional foundation and good values. Their college
acceptances have nothing, or little, to do with your parenting. This is
about your child. And they should feel good about moving towards one of
the greatest transitions in their lives. Wherever your kid gets into
college this month, go out and celebrate. This is how you share without
bleeding.
Madeline Levine, Ph.D., is a nationally known psychologist with over 25 years of experience as a clinician, consultant, and educator. Her New York Times best-selling book, The Price of Privilege, explores the reasons why teenagers from affluent families are experiencing epidemic rates of emotional problems. Her follow-up best-selling book, Teach Your Children Well, focuses on expanding our current narrow and shortsighted view of success and providing concrete strategies for parents. Her two previous books, Viewing Violence and See No Evil, both received critical acclaim. Dr. Levine began her career as an elementary and junior high school teacher in the South Bronx of New York before moving to California and earning her degrees in psychology. She has taught Child Development classes to graduate students at the University of California Medical Center / San Francisco. Dr. Levine lectures extensively to parent, school and business audiences both nationally and internationally.
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