We All Need Gravity

August 25, 2019

Mother and teen daughter happy together.

We all need emotional gravity, the peace and stability that comes from living the Laws of Happiness. And we must teach emotional gravity to our children.

Even when it’s difficult, we must not shirk our responsibility to be loving teachers. They won't always be grateful, but if we don’t, we condemn our children to so much unnecessary pain. 

Life Without Emotional Gravity


Let’s take a look at Jessica and her daughter Alane. For fifteen years they had waged war with each other. Jessica tried to make Alane be more responsible, and, not unlike most children, Alane vigorously resisted these efforts.

In our first conversation I learned that it was not uncommon for Alane to call her mother hateful and vulgar names normally reserved for bar brawls.  She frequently expressed herself with violence: throwing things, turning over tables, and the like.

Just a few days before, Alane had thrown a ceramic cup at her mother, giving her a black eye. Her mother, Jessica, actually said to me, "But she didn't mean to." Their relationship had been tragically diseased for so long that Jessica was justifying it as "normal."

Jessica asked me what I thought, so I asked her, "What do you think of the law of gravity?"

She paused and replied, "I don't understand."

"If you were required to carry a hundred-pound bag of concrete for some distance, you'd probably be grateful if gravity quit working for a while, wouldn't you?"

"Probably so, yes," she said.

"Overall, though, can you imagine what the world would be like without gravity?"

"A real mess. Houses would float away, we couldn't walk–awful."

"True. So even though gravity is occasionally a real inconvenience–even a potential cause of death–we need it. It provides a reliable environment in which we can make decisions with predictable results. Gravity is a good thing, yes?"

"Certainly."

Providing Emotional Gravity


"The same is true with all natural laws. If we want to be most productive, we must learn them and make our choices accordingly. In a similar way, happiness is a result of living according to a set of principles that are clearly defined but often ignored.

"If we live according to the Laws of Happiness, we WILL be happy, just as we are most productive when we live according to natural laws. When you do nothing in response to your daughter's outrageous behaviors, she believes that she can ignore the Laws of Happiness without consequences.

"That is a very dangerous belief. Essentially, you're guaranteeing her misery. She must be taught the Laws of Happiness. You must provide gravity, so to speak, in her life."

Although Jessica dreaded confrontation with her daughter, she nonetheless met with her and called me afterward. "We had a meeting today," she said, "and I told her that all her life I had done a terrible job of teaching her the principles that would help her to be happy.

"I said there would be no more name calling, screaming, or physical violence. I can't stop her from doing those things, of course. But I said that every time she behaved in those ways, I would take her cell phone from her for a day.

"That phone is always attached to her. She can't imagine living without it. I told her that if I didn't teach her the Laws of Happiness and the consequences for violating them, she couldn't possibly learn to be happy."

"How did she respond?" I asked.

"I can hardly believe what happened. She agreed that her behavior had been wrong. She actually looked RELIEVED that I was helping her find a happier way of living."

"You gave her life gravity, my dear. She won't always like it, but now she knows the rules. Her world has order in it, where before it was just chaotic. No child likes chaos."

We all need gravity and an awareness of how it works. And we must teach emotional gravity to our children. Even when it’s difficult, we must not shirk our responsibility to be loving teachers.

They won't always be grateful, but if we don’t, we condemn our children to so much unnecessary pain.

Summary

1.

We can't be happy unless we live the Laws of Happiness and have emotional gravity in our lives.

2.

Recognize bad behavior for what it is and don't justify it.

3.

Tell the truth about your parenting mistakes and give consequences for bad behavior.

What You Can Do Now

Join with other parents who are experiencing the same problems. Let Greg teach you how to feel loved and not fear your child's disapproval. Click on the button below and watch a free lesson from the Ridiculously Effective Parenting Training course today.


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Portrait of Greg Baer

About the author

I am the founder of The Real Love® Company, Inc, a non-profit organization. Following the sale of my successful ophthalmology practice I have dedicated the past 25 years to teaching people a remarkable process that replaces all of life's "crazy" with peace, confidence and meaning in various aspects of their personal lives, including parenting, marriages, the workplace and more.

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