What a Difference a Mom Makes: The Indelible Imprint a Mom Leaves on Her Son's Life
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In What a Difference a Mom Makes, New York Times bestselling author Dr. Kevin Leman uses his wit and wisdom to show Mom how to lay the groundwork that will allow her son to grow into a good man. Armed with Dr. Leman's expert advice and insight, Mom will gain an understanding of her boy at every stage, from that very first diaper change to the moment he leaves for college. Dr. Leman shows how to discipline a boy, how to command respect, how to let him fight his own battles, how to understand his sexuality, and how to weather the changes in the mother-son relationship as he grows up. Most of all, Leman shows Mom how to lighten up and have some fun along the way with that boy who will always have her heart.
Dr. Kevin Leman
Dr. Kevin Leman is an internationally known psychologist, radio and television personality, and speaker. He has made house calls through hundreds of radio and television programs, such as FOX & Friends, The View, FOX's The Morning Show, Today, Morning in America, The 700 Club, CBS's The Early Show, Janet Parshall, CNN, and Focus on the Family, and has served as a contributing family psychologist to Good Morning America. A bestselling and award-winning author, Dr. Leman has written more than 50 books, including The Birth Order Book and Have a New Kid by Friday. Dr. Leman and his wife, Sande, live in Tucson, Arizona. They have five children and four grandchildren.
Read more from Dr. Kevin Leman
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What a Difference a Mom Makes - Dr. Kevin Leman
sheen.
Introduction
Boys Will Be Boys—Always
You panic. I don’t know a thing about boys!
Ah, but you will.
You’ve always dreamed of having that precious little daughter—one who is a little replica of you. You dream of the close relationship you’ll have as mother and daughter, watching her taking her first step, buying her first tutu for her ballet recital, arranging her hair for her first date . . .
And then you show up at the doctor’s office for your sonogram.
What’s that?
you say, pointing at a little something you can’t quite place on the blurry black-and-white image.
And the doc says, That’s a penis.
You frown, not understanding. My daughter’s got a penis?
Then realization dawns. A boy?
Inside you start to panic. What do I do with a boy? I don’t know a thing about boys!
Ah, but you will.
Maybe you weren’t raised with any siblings, or at least with any brothers. Perhaps your dad was MIA, so you didn’t get much guy influence in your house. Or maybe you did have a brother, but you didn’t understand him then . . . or now.
Or perhaps you’re already thrown into the process of bringing up your boy. He might be an infant you recently birthed or adopted, and you’re congratulating yourself because you just figured out how to strategically place the Pampers so you don’t get those early-morning or late-night surprise showers when you change his diaper. Good for you! You’re on the road to success already.
Your son might be a toddler who has recently told you in that determined tone you know means business, By self, Mom. I do it by self.
Perhaps your son will soon be going off to preschool or kindergarten. You can’t help but think, My baby’s leaving the nest. Half of you looks forward to the break (and the quiet!), but the other half mourns your son going off somewhere—anywhere—without you.
Then there’s your nine-year-old, who used to be so close and affectionate but now is backing off a bit. He even asked you the other day to walk a few steps behind him and said, "Please, Mom, don’t hug me in front of the guys."
And your adolescent son? The one who eats cereal in a bowl you could put a bowling ball in? You’re a little tired of hearing a grunt and then a door slam in response to your How was your day?
Picking up sweaty socks from his jungle of a bedroom isn’t your idea of a fun afternoon either.
Then there’s your high schooler. The one who shaves but doesn’t always use deodorant. Yeah, that one. The same one who gets annoyed when you do the sniff test
before he walks out the door to school. Sometimes you wonder if you would matter in his life at all if you weren’t holding the car keys.
Let’s face it. There are times you’re really stumped about why your son does what he does. Why he says what he says. And what’s he really thinking? You haven’t got a clue. Sometimes your son is just such a . . . boy.
Boys and girls sure are different, aren’t they? I just saw five seventh-grade girls yesterday, talking nonstop and clustered together like a gaggle of geese. The seventh-grade boys? They were strutting like roosters single file behind those girls, acting cooler than cool, high-fiving each other every once in a while in a show of masculine bravado.
Then I caught a glimpse of the second and third graders on the playground. The girls all resembled a covey of quail, traveling in flocks, clucking and hugging. The boys? In the five minutes I watched, three of them were pushing and yelling right in each other’s faces, and two more were whacking each other hard on the shoulder. Another boy a little farther down the field got tackled by three other guys in a rough-and-tumble game of football.
Besides the easy-to-see physical trait differences, there are lots of emotional and mental differences too. As a girl yourself, you might not always understand your boy, but he’ll always be your boy. Your son is altogether different from you, but when it comes to him, you’re Mama Bear. May God help anyone who says anything negative about your little cub. They could easily lose an arm.
But you want to know something else? Of all the people in the world, you, Mom, make the biggest difference in your son’s world. He may not act like it. (In fact, he may act far from it!) Yet when it comes right down to who’s the most important to your son, it’s you. You see, your son is hiding a secret from you. He’ll never reveal it to you straight out, so I’ll say it plainly. Your boy wants to please you. And that driving need will stay with him for a lifetime.
That gives you, Mom, a lot of power in your son’s life. You can set your son up for success in life—or failure. You, and only you, can help him understand what it is to be male and how to form healthy relationships with other females. After all, if he doesn’t learn that from you, where will he learn it from?
I’ll share with you another secret too: males aren’t nearly as complex as females. But their hearts are just as tender and easily hurt.
What a Difference a Mom Makes is all about you. It’s about your son. It’s about the relationship the two of you have right now—and the relationship you can have. It’s about understanding the male your boy is and helping to craft him into the man you want him to be when he leaves your nest to fly on his own. It’s about understanding yourself and why you respond to your son the way you do. And it’s about not only weathering the changes in your relationship as your son grows up, but enjoying the fun along the way as well.
The old adage is true: boys will always be boys. But honestly, would you want your boy to be any different?
Just don’t forget the secret: how much you matter in your boy’s world.
1
Your Boy Doesn’t Need to Wear a Skirt
(But He Does Need a Good Dose of Femininity)
You, Mom, leave an indelible imprint on your child. Here’s why.
Honey, what’s the matter?" I asked immediately upon hearing my wife’s frantic voice on the phone. I was in my office at the time, and I couldn’t even decipher what she was saying at first since she was crying and nearly hysterical.
Immediately my heart began to race. One of my kids had to be seriously injured . . . or dead.
Finally my wife blurted out, It’s Kevin!
Oh no! I thought. I asked, Did he fall into the pool?
It was my worst nightmare coming to life. My eighteen-month-old son had drowned in our own backyard.
No,
Sande said. More sobs. It’s his tallywhacker.
I wasn’t sure I’d heard right. His tallywhacker?
Yeah,
she said, "it’s purple!"
Purple?
I was really confused now. What happened? Did somebody hit him?
No, he colored it with a magic marker.
I couldn’t help it. I burst out laughing. Little Kevin had always shown a predisposition toward art, but this creative endeavor really beat them all.
What are you laughing about?
Sande asked, horrified.
Little boys do things like that,
I replied. That’s the funniest thing I’ve ever heard!
Sande didn’t see why it was so funny.
Boys Are Always up to Something
You see, I knew something Sande didn’t. Boys will keep you on your toes. I’m a prime example. When I was a boy, my mom hated to do my laundry. Who can blame her? She once reached into my pants pocket and got bit! After hearing a bloodcurdling scream of Keeeviiin!
I came running and fished out the critters from my pocket. I couldn’t understand what the big deal was. After all, I’d gone fishing that day and had just forgotten to remove the crayfish, cricket, grasshopper, and two salamanders from my jeans.
There’s no doubt that boys are not girls. Boys do their nails with their teeth—no expensive manicures needed. Most don’t think twice about wearing the same T-shirt they wore yesterday . . . and the day before that . . . even if it does have a few dirt stains or smell a little rank.
Boys spit and burp. They make all sorts of other noises too, like bbbppssittt and vrrooom! when their toy planes or cars take off at top speed. They like to crash things and knock their sister’s blocks down. Such acts are a part of their day. They’re rarely quiet, but when they are, you better come running to check things out, because most likely they’re up to something. They whistle and tease girls when they like them. They might even push girls or try to wrestle them. (Most girls simply aren’t appreciative of such actions. I ought to know, since I tried a few of those moves in my own growing-up years.)
What Makes Boys So Different from Girls?
What makes boys so different from girls—other than the obvious? Researchers in the journal Cerebral Cortex reported a fascinating difference between men and women in regard to the part of the brain that controls visual-spatial abilities and concepts of mental space—skills necessary for tasks such as mathematics and architecture. That area of the brain is about 6 percent larger in men than in women.[1] But does that mean men are smarter? Not necessarily. Men’s brains may be larger, but women’s contain more brain cells.[2] Also, male and female brains work differently. When men and women perform identical tasks, different areas of their brains light up in response.[3] In addition, females use both hemispheres, while male brain activity is restricted to one side.[4]
Perhaps that’s why you sometimes feel you and your son are on opposite sides of the planet—because you truly are. You’re able to bounce from brain hemisphere to brain hemisphere, but he’s solidly entrenched in one and can see only that side of the equation without your help. Another good reason God almighty created both men and women. We need each other in many ways!
Men tend to focus on the present and the future, and they like to present possibilities whether they’re realistic or not. They are often fast moving and risk takers. Contrast that with women, who tend to focus on the present and the past due to their relational abilities, and since they use both sides of their brain, they tend to think more realistically and in detail about tasks that need to be done. As a result, they are usually more cautious and less risk taking. Put the two together and it’s easy to see why you and your son will sometimes disagree or even clash.
But the more you know about that male critter in your house, the better off you’ll be.
Boys Are Competitive
Boys are tough. They’re competitive. They say things like:
My dad’s stronger than your dad.
Oh yeah? Well, my dad’s got really big muscles. The other day he . . .
"You think so? Well, last week, my dad . . ."
Or like:
Hey, look at me! I can swing higher!
Oh yeah? I can hang upside down!
Well, me too!
Notice all the I
and me/my
language that boys use. Now why is that? From the very beginning of their lives, little boys are primed for independence, and that independent edge only grows stronger as they grow older.
Boys are risk takers who don’t want anyone else to get ahead of them in life. They’ve got a drive to be number one and in the fast lane. They’re born competitive. They go after what they want with determination. That’s why you’ll rarely find guys like me in the slower, right-hand lane of the expressway. We’re always the ones zooming to the outside lane to see how far ahead we can get of the next sucker.
Now, my wife? She waits patiently in her lane to get to wherever she wants to go.
For boys, it’s not just the thing that counts, it’s the size of the thing. That’s why if a fourth-grade boy gets a skateboard, his buddy has to get one too . . . but it has to be bigger and badder. It’s why the junior high locker room is a difficult and embarrassing place to be. I know about that too. My skinny white body with its sole chest hair wasn’t much competition for the boys who already looked like men in every way. And they didn’t cut me any slack.
Boys Get Bored—Fast
Within the heart of every boy is an adventurer. Boys like to be on the move. (I can hear some of you saying, You can say that again! He never stops!
) They have wildly different attention spans than girls. They prefer to look at objects for shorter time periods, but they are more active in their attention to that object. Boys are physical beings—they’re attracted to the physical. They’re not into talking about the details; they’re scoping out the details—the way a toy is built, the way a computer runs, or the cute waitress at IHOP.
What This Mom Did Right
Ben Carson grew up in abject poverty. He was the son of Sonya, who had dropped out of school in the third grade and married when she was only 13. She and her husband divorced when Ben was only eight, and Sonya cleaned houses, among numerous other jobs, to provide for Ben and his older brother.
When Ben was in fifth grade, he was at the bottom of his class. His mother was determined that both her sons would have a good start in life in spite of their situation, so she took action. She especially wanted them to be good readers (whether they wanted to be or not). Each week she had her sons read two books and write reports on them. This wasn’t part of their regular schoolwork but something extra she assigned to them.
Ben was in sixth grade when he found out something intriguing: his mother was basically illiterate. She could barely read the reports her sons turned in to her. But she didn’t let anything stop her from encouraging her sons to succeed.
Today Dr. Ben Carson is the top pediatric neurosurgeon (among other roles) at Johns Hopkins University.[5]
Boys are more intense and tightly wired, and they’re bored much more quickly. Their brains move more rapidly from object to object, which means they can often get the full scope of a project more quickly than girls. But they also take in less sensory information than girls, so they can miss things along the way. That means boys sometimes misinterpret what someone says, because they don’t take the time to process both the verbal and the physical cues to see if that person really means what they’re saying. That’s why sarcastic comments such as Well, it’s about time you took out the trash
are lost on boys. So why not save your own emotional energy and just ask your son in a straightforward manner to take out the trash now?
Boys Are Singularly Focused
When you throw any new information your boy’s way, you’ll most often hear that famous word: Huh?
Does this mean your boy is ignoring you? Or that he’s completely clueless? No, it means he’s deeply focused on the world of whatever he’s thinking about, and he isn’t able to change his thought track as fast or as often as you can. He’s solving a problem, and he can only handle one problem at a time. But no doubt about it—the problem will be solved.
Males are wired to be singularly focused. When they’re doing a task, they’re doing just that task—not thinking up their to-do list for the rest of their day like you are. To say that males aren’t multitaskers is the understatement of the century. But, Mom, that’s why they need you in their world.
I Am King, Hear Me Roar!
Within the heart of every little boy is the need to be king. To conquer and to be the one in charge. To be the one who figures everything out by himself. The lone hero standing on top of the highest rock, sword in hand.
It’s why even grown-up men don’t ask for directions. They want to figure it out by themselves. It’s the challenge of the hunt that drives them. They have the capacity to stop and ask for directions, but they don’t want to. They’re primed to do the task and believe they can get the job done, even if it’s not their natural bent. So why should he need your help, even if you’ve been driving in circles for an hour and your suggestion to stop is a good one? That’s male thinking, as exasperating as it might be to you.
Your son wants to conquer the task, and he doesn’t want your help (at least right now—let him get a little more desperate first). It’s why your 6-year-old boy tried to take apart your toaster (without your knowledge)—he wanted to figure out how it worked. It’s why your 14-year-old is in the living room stomping around—he can’t figure out the directions to his new computer game, and he’s not about to ask for help. But if you give him a little time to cool down, he’ll most likely retackle the task with gusto and figure it out himself. If not, his emotions will have calmed enough that he may even consider asking for help from Dad, the computer guru, or Frank, the next-door-neighbor game whiz.
Boys have the need to be in control and to stay in control. They also have the innate drive to stay on top of the manure pile of life. That’s why they work hard and they play hard. Life belongs to those who get there first, who work hard, who are the fastest, and who stay on top, boys are primed to think. And they’re determined to be the conqueror, the winner.
That’s why your son is likely to tell you about what has gone well for him—at school, in the gym, at work—but isn’t as likely to tell you when things go wrong. Doing so goes against his competitive, conqueror-driven nature.
Such an attitude can serve your son well in school, in his career, and in life, but without the balance you bring to the equation, it can be harmful to his relationships.
Your Son’s Number One Woman—Guess Who?
Every tough, risk-taking boy needs a good dose of femininity. No, I’m not talking about getting in touch with his feminine side.
For the past several decades, society has been working hard to redefine men’s roles and to emphasize the sensitive
man who is supposed to enjoy cuddling and talkfests, and basically act like a girlfriend would. But is that really who you want your son to be? A girlfriend? Or do you want him to be a real man—one who is determined, honorable, and goal-oriented, but also loving and thoughtful toward the women in his life?
Frankly, I’m sick of getting in touch with my feminine self.
I like the masculine part just fine, thank you very much. I like channel surfing. I won’t