Mrs. Yael Kaisman
External Successes, Internal Successes
As we all know, a most fundamental principle of the Torah is “Love your fellow as yourself.” It is the phrase which typifies a Jew’s attitude towards his fellow brethren and colors the nature of his interaction and care for others. Nevertheless, what is obvious yet at times oblivious, is the latter part of this phrase: we are to love ourselves.
It may seem strange to consider, but although we may naturally always be thinking about ourselves, do we really love ourselves? Ask yourself: do you love who you are? And foremost, what does it mean to love yourself?
I remember once hugging my two-year-old daughter and going through everyone in our entire family who loves her. “Mommy loves you,” I said, “Abba loves you and bubby and zaidy…” I continued listing her aunts, uncles and siblings, until I was completed. Within a heartbeat, she looked at me with both innocence and glee and added, “And I even love myself!” At that very moment, I whispered a short tefillah to Hashem that she always should feel that way about herself.
Yet what does loving yourself really mean? Simply put, it means that you feel that you have what you need to become who you can become. You deeply appreciate the totality of yourself and your potential and recognize your true qualities. The question for parents thus becomes, what can be done to foster this unconditional love within our children? What and how can we teach our children to love themselves?
Real Internal Successes
Years ago, I began thinking about this. At times, we identify a strength or success of ours and believe that the same success is what our child needs also to feel worthy. If we excelled in a certain area of life, we place high value to it, and thereby wish for our children to also experience that achievement. In my own personal life, I was strong in academics. It was thus a turning point in my own outlook and thinking process when I was once told at a Parent-Teacher Conference for my daughter in third grade, “She is doing wonderful.” “What does ‘wonderful’ mean?” I thought to myself. How wonderful is wonderful? It was at this point that my mind starting racing with ideas, which would go on to become extremely formative in my own approach to parenting and education.
The dilemma is as follows. Oftentimes, our children are winners of awards for the gifts Hashem has given them. They may be intelligent, beautiful, organized or creative and be recognized for such capabilities. We may say, “You’re so smart and so beautiful; I love you so much!” If these, though, become the only source of our praise and approval, we can easily begin to overlook the effort and work they have expended into developing positive character traits which are not innate. Naturally, we bunch the phrases together and directly or indirectly draw a parallel between their intelligence or beauty and our love for them.
But what if they are not smart or the most creative? Wouldn’t we still love them? The above expression is thus a message which can and should be conveyed to our loved ones, but should be tempered by us praising other internal areas they excel in too. The first and foremost step to ingraining ourselves, our children and our students with a love and appreciation for themselves is understanding the difference between characteristics which are inborn blessings and those which have been honed through internal struggle and success.
Real successes are quantified by the efforts we put in relating to the most important part of life, namely, the development of ourselves as mirror images of Hashem. When we become more G-dly and stretch our capacity for compassion and patience, which we can call internal successes, we are reaching beyond innate parts of our character and developing new traits which heretofore may not have been a part of us. It is in this arena that we can begin to truly value who we are as a person and love and award ourselves.
External Successes as Stepping Stones
But this process goes further and deeper. This does not mean that our traits of intelligence and orderliness should be ignored; to the contrary, they are very important stepping stones towards internal successes. If we are more organized by nature, we are in a better position to achieving more. External success can thus be used as a means for developing ourselves as people. In example, a person’s success in working hard at a job is not solely the paycheck, which is the external success and by nature gets the bulk of praise and admiration, but the discipline which was developed through working and which will in turn be used in serving Hashem. We ought to therefore celebrate and appreciate the discipline, patience and listening skills indirectly gained from the external success, because those former internal successes are real achievements and what move us closer to perfecting our character and coming closer to Hashem. The external success is thus celebrated insofar as it relates to the internal success.
If a child thus gets a high mark on a test, how are we to respond? If we merely praise the grade, we are focusing on the external success and overlooking the internal success. What is thus wise to highlight is the internal effort. “When you studied, you are terrific; when you got the mark, how fortunate are you that when you studied you did well.” The child now understands what it means to work hard, and regardless of the grade earned has honed that important trait of diligence and appreciates it. In this way, the praise we attach to the effort as opposed to the result will only deepen the child’s value for hard work in life.
Use it Well
Last but not least, external successes and inborn traits are both blessings and challenges. The best way we can ensure that these parts of ourselves remain blessings instead of overwhelming challenges is by using them well. Use your beauty to become a role model of modesty which people will look up to, and do your utmost to make sure it does not become an obsession and source of conceit. The best advice is thus three words: use it well. Take your beauty and become someone more gracious, giving and sensitive because people are drawn to you like a magnet and you are left with numerous opportunities for kindness. Channel the external success and turn it into a true, everlasting internal success.
If these are the messages we send our children – the importance of internal successes, how external successes can be a means towards character development and what it means to use our inborn traits and external successes well – we are on our way towards positive parenting. Our children will be led on a path in which they appreciate not only their efforts, but their achievements as well with a healthy attitude. Whether they earn the grade or win the game as they wished, they succeeded on multiple fronts. They worked hard, developed inborn and new character traits, and internally succeeded, if not externally succeeded. Every effort is thus a victory and cause of celebration, for a person has grown, developed and learned something new about themselves and life. And when this is the feeling which swells up within a child, a healthy self-image will blossom and the heartwarming line which all parents eagerly await to hear will follow, “And I even love myself!”