67. Needing

Many creatures great and small, but not all of them, start out needing their parents. I’m not sure, but I think the complicated creatures need their parents longer than the simple ones. Human beings need them for years. The actual degree and duration of this dependency among humans varies greatly. Bill Cosby, in his book Fatherhood, points out that we are probably the only species that will let our offspring move back in with us after they leave.
Besides needing, people need to be needed, and for some people, this is one of the reasons to have children. To varying degrees, we want our children to need us, and also to varying degrees, we want them to stop needing us. If you watch parents bringing their children to day care centers, you can see a variety of dramas: The child who clings to the parent who is trying to leave, the parent who clings to the child who wants to go play, the two clinging to each other, the ones who don’t cling, and the mixtures of all these patterns.
The dramas can be comedies, tragedies, and/or melodramas. Seldom is there a neat arrangement wherein all players get precisely as much as they need and get needed precisely as they much as they need to be needed. Some people say that ideal situations like that would be boring. Maybe they would, but just once, I’d like to be part of one just to see for myself.
More typically, a parent is disgruntled because a son or daughter is too needy, or not needy enough. The son or daughter is annoyed because the parent is too needy, or too indifferent. Of course, ideally one grows up, and then afterwards becomes a parent, but growing up is not as clear-cut a process among us complicated creatures. A friend of mine once thought of starting a group called “Adult Children of Adult Children.” If we look carefully, most of us can find aspects of our parents that can remind us that they are models for us, but many of our parents grew up in a volatile world, and many of us grew up in another volatile world. Adults frequently describe each other and themselves as children, and the descriptions are sometimes flattering, sometimes not.
People do need each other in some ways, and they do need to be independent in other ways. For some people, the dependency/autonomy struggle, one of Ericson’s stages of life, is all of life. I hope you weren’t hoping for a profound statement at the end of this article. The closest I can come is that we ought to look at each person and ourselves closely, and try to notice what is needed and what isn’t.

Similar Posts

  • 446. Writing Fiction

    I’ve sometimes tried to write fiction. I’ve liked some of what I’ve written, and even sent some of it to a few publishers (with no success). And yet I only recently learned, in a third grade class, that there are some conventions to follow in writing fiction. I learned that even though you may have…

  • 47. Inclusion

    Around the United States and around the world, it is being decided that children with “special needs” ought to be included in regular classrooms as much as possible – that removing a child from a classroom for instruction is harmful to everyone involved. Before I explore the nooks and crannies of this issue, let me…

  • 459. Staff Meetings

    One of the great things about being a retired volunteer is that I don’t have to go to staff meetings unless I want to. Now in my third year as a retired volunteer (as of this writing), I still haven’t wanted to. I like spending time with the teachers; we have great discussions in the…

  • 474. Writer’s Block

    Sometimes people don’t have anything they feel like writing about. That’s my problem right now. I’ve been having computer trouble for almost a week, and during that week, I assumed that articles were growing in my mind, and that I would have all kinds of things to write about as soon as my computer was…

  • 101. Tattling

    There are countless hours spent in courtrooms and dollars paid to lawyers because we want things to be fair. Someone else has done something that shouldn’t have been done or gotten something that we should have gotten, and we want justice. Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just go up to some taller person…

  • 161. Being There

    Children usually start out life right near the people who gave it to them. That’s often really good time. Love flows back and forth, and parents and children work together to make life work. There are problems, issues, and headaches, but if there weren’t rewards that made it all worthwhile, there wouldn’t be quite so…