W
CHAPTER 3
Release Your Children from the Need for Your
Approval
ithout  our realizing   it, we  bind    our children    to  us  by  tying
them    to  our approval,   making  them    slaves  to  our judgments
of  them.   Either  we  constantly  starve  them    of  our approval,
or  we  cause   them    to  become  dependent   on  it.
Can you imagine how it  must    feel    for a   child   to  be  starved of  our
approval    and fearful of  our disapproval?    How different   this    must    be  from
knowing they    are unconditionally accepted    and honored.
Every   child   realizes    that    their   behavior    sometimes   gets    them    into    a
pickle, but this    isn’t   at  all the same    as  not being   accepted    and respected
for who they    fundamentally   are.    This    is  why it’s    so  crucial that,   as
parents,    we  free    ourselves   of  the illusion    that    it’s    our place   to  approve of
who are children    are.    Who are we  to  judge   them?   They    need    to  know    that
by  simply  being   on  this    Earth,  they    have    a   right   to  approval    of  who they
intrinsically   are.    We  don’t   confer  this    right   on  them.   Just    by  the fact    they
draw    breath, they    have    the right   to  speak   their   mind,   express their
feelings,   and embody  their   spirit. Such    rights  are bestowed    with    the birth
certificate.
It  may come    as  a   surprise    to  hear    that    both    disapproval and approval
are tentacles   of  control.    While   we  can certainly   praise  our children    and
celebrate   their   successes,  it’s    so  easy    to  introduce   the taint   of  approval    or
disapproval,    which   quickly affects how our children    feel    about   their
