Is Extreme Parenting Effective?

455517 thumbnail
Posted: 15 years ago
#1
Cultural Studies

Retreat of the 'Tiger Mother'

By KATE ZERNIKE
Published: January 14, 2011
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Bob Daemmrich/Polaris

The author at a 2007 book signing.

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Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris

Amy Chua, author of "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother," with her husband, Jed Rubenfeld, and daughters Lulu, left, and Sophia.

Declare that the way Asian-American parents succeed in raising such successful children is by denying them play dates and sleepovers, and demanding that they bring home straight A's.

Note that you once told your own hyper-successful Asian-American daughter that she was "garbage." That you threatened to throw out your other daughter's dollhouse and refused to let her go to the bathroom one evening until she mastered a difficult piano composition. That you threw the homemade birthday cards they gave you as 7- and 4-year-olds back in their faces, saying you expected more effort.

Better yet, write a book about it.

What kind of reaction might you get?

In the week since The Wall Street Journal published an excerpt of the new book by Amy Chua, a Yale law professor, under the headline "Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior," Ms. Chua has received death threats, she says, and "hundreds, hundreds" of e-mails. The excerpt generated more than 5,000 comments on the newspaper's Web site, and countless blog entries referring in shorthand to "that Tiger Mother." Some argued that the parents of all those Asians among Harvard's chosen few must be doing something right; many called Ms. Chua a "monster" or "nuts" — and a very savvy provocateur.

A law blog suggested a "Mommie Dearest" element to her tale ("No. Wire. Hangers! Ever!!"). Another post was titled "Parents like Amy Chua are the reason Asian-Americans like me are in therapy." A Taiwanese video circulating on YouTube (subtitled in English) concluded that Ms. Chua would not mind if her children grew up disturbed and rebellious, as long as she sold more books.

"It's been a little surprising, and a little bit intense, definitely," Ms. Chua said in a phone interview on Thursday, between what she called a "24/7" effort to "clarify some misunderstandings." Her narration, she said, was meant to be ironic and self-mocking — "I find it very funny, almost obtuse."

But reading the book, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother," it can be hard to tell when she is kidding.

"In retrospect, these coaching suggestions seem a bit extreme," she writes in the book after describing how she once threatened to burn her daughter's stuffed animals if she did not play a piano composition perfectly. "On the other hand, they were highly effective."

In interviews, she comes off as unresolved. "I think I pulled back at the right time," she said. "I do not think there was anything abusive in my house." Yet, she added, "I stand by a lot of my critiques of Western parenting. I think there's a lot of questions about how you instill true self-esteem."

Her real crime, she said, may have been telling the truth. "I sort of feel like people are not that honest about their own parenting," she said. "Take any teenage household, tell me there is not yelling and conflict."

Ms. Chua is one half of the kind of Asian-Jewish academic power couple that, as she notes, populates many university towns. Her husband is Jed Rubenfeld, also a Yale law professor, and the author of two successful mystery novels. Ms. Chua, herself the author of two previous books, was reported to have received an advance in the high six figures for "Tiger Mother."

If she has one regret, she said, it is that the Journal excerpt, and particularly the headline, did not reflect the full arc of her story.

Her book is a memoir that ends with her relenting (sort of) when the younger of her two teenage daughters refuses to go along with the "extreme parenting" Ms. Chua uses to prevent the kind of decline that she thinks makes some third-generation Asian-Americans as soft and entitled as their teammates on suburban soccer teams where every child is declared Most Valuable Player.

"I've been forced to answer questions about a book I didn't write," she said. "It's not saying what people should do, it's saying, 'Here's what I did, and boy did I learn a lesson.' " All this is captured, she said, in the book's three-paragraph subtitle, which concludes with the words, "and how I was humbled by a thirteen-year-old."

Born to Chinese parents who were raised in the Philippines and attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ms. Chua, 48, graduated from Harvard and Harvard Law, where she was an executive editor of the Law Review. She confesses in her book that she is "not good at enjoying life," and that she wasn't naturally curious or skeptical like other law students. "I just wanted to write down everything the professor said and memorize it."

Room For Debate

Is Extreme Parenting Effective?

Does strict control of a child's life lead to greater success?

She was determined to raise her daughters the way she and her three sisters had been raised — which, she said, left them adoring their parents. By her account, her elder daughter, Sophia, complied, excelled and played piano at Carnegie Hall. But the younger, Lulu, rebelled. At the turning point of the memoir, Lulu, then 13, begins smashing glasses in a Moscow restaurant and yelling at her mother, "I HATE my life, I HATE you."

Ms. Chua's husband appears only peripherally in "Tiger Mother" — though there is one battle in which she lashes out at him after he worries that she is pushing their daughters to the point that there is "no breathing room" in their home.

"All you do is think about writing your own books and your own future," she says to him. "What dreams do you have for Sophia or for Lulu? Do you ever think about that? What dreams do you have for Coco?" He bursts out laughing — Coco is their dog.

She concludes, "I didn't understand what was so funny, but I was glad our fight was over."

Initially, Ms. Chua said, she wrote large chunks about her husband and their conflicts overchild rearing. But she gave him approval on every page, and when he kept insisting she was putting words in his mouth, it became easier to leave him out.

"It's more my story," she said. "I was the one that in a very overconfident immigrant way thought I knew exactly how to raise my kids. My husband was much more typical. He had a lot of anxiety, he didn't think he knew all the right choices." And, she said, "I was the one willing to put in the hours."

Still, she said, her children got pancakes and trips to water parks because of their father, the son of parents more inclined to encourage self-discovery.

The reaction to the book was particularly anguished among those who are products of extreme Asian parents. "I'm horrified that she's American-born and hanging on to this, when most of us are trying to escape it," said Betty Ming Liu, the daughter of Chinese immigrants from Vietnam and author of one of the many blog posts about the book. A California woman recalled how her sister became the perfect Asian daughter Ms. Chua aspires to produce, only to kill herself because she was afraid to tell anyone she suffered from depression.

Ann Hulbert, the author of "Raising America," a history of a century's worth of conflicting child-rearing advice, who is writing a book about child prodigies, notes that it is not hard to reignite the Mommy Wars.

"There is a kind of utter certainty in her writing," she said of Ms. Chua, "and that confidence goes so against the underlying grain of American parenting and child-rearing expertise that it immediately elicits a response that then suggests a kind of certainty on the other side that isn't there, either."

Friends describe Ms. Chua as self-deprecating and a dry wit, her children as happy, and their home as humming with music and activity and, yes, love.

"Not that she's without opinion, but she's writing a memoir, not a parenting guide," said Alexis Contant, who describes Ms. Chua as her closest friend for 20 years. "She will say sleepovers are overrated, but I have never heard her say, 'I can't believe so-and-so let their kid do it.' "

Ms. Chua said that her daughters have been eager to speak out in favor of the book; she is shielding them from the publicity. She said, however, that they did ultimately have play dates — though not many between the ages of 9 and 13, due to music practice. Sophia, now 18, has a boyfriend, she told me. "My kids have whatever those things are called — iPods," she said. "They have iTunes accounts."

Ms. Chua wrote most of the book in eight weeks, yet struggled with the end, she said, reflecting the East-West tug on her parenting. "It's a work in progress," she said. "On bad days I would say this method is terrible. I just need to give them freedom and choice. On good days, when Lulu would say: 'I'm so glad you made me write that second draft of my essay. My teacher read it out loud,' I think, I've got to stick to my guns."

This week, her book tour will take her to the places where she has surely sparked the most debate: the Bay Area, Cambridge and the northwest quadrant of Washington.

But first, the family was planning to celebrate Lulu's 15th birthday. They were taking her and eight of her friends to New York City. For a sleepover.

Do you think pushing hard children so that they could suceed is a good way to bring them up?

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Summer3 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Trailblazer Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 15 years ago
#2
Frankly all this over pushing and over driving is what I have always hated since I was a kid. My parents left me to manage on my own cause I had my own ideas.
Summer3 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Trailblazer Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 15 years ago
#3
Tiger mum reminded me of Tiger Woods but he was pushed by his American Dad.
455517 thumbnail
Posted: 15 years ago
#4

Well my parents were pretty pushy when I had bad mark & school results and I can't blame them for that..but I made my own mistakes...I learnt from them!

Well being pushed may be good cause when y're young you don'tr have necessariloy a clear mind about everything which could be good for you.
Summer3 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Trailblazer Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 15 years ago
#5
Yes true but I found adults a nuisance since young. Hate to be reborn again n become a youth n start all over again.
-Believe- thumbnail
20th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 15 years ago
#6

Some situation I feel give birth to children is nothing ...it is a natural, biological, instinctive process...to give birth to a child is nothing gr8, it is nothing special... it is very ordinary. Bt to be a parent is something extraordinary... very few people are really capable of being parents...Now a days the whole effort is how to implant his ambitions into the child... and parents trying different ways to enforce their ambitions on the child.. that's how conditioning begins.😊

455517 thumbnail
Posted: 15 years ago
#7
Conditioning...? Yes in most cases....but there's some truth you say about some people not being "able" to be parents...there are parents who don't care about how much money they spend and don't have any concerns about what their kids will beeating or not at lunch...that's sad....
It's a huge responsibility...
Tiger Mommy isn't a bad person..she's in fact very rigorous hence demanding -- she wants the best out & for her kids..that may be too pressuring at times...I guess her husband balances it all!
mr.ass thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Rocker Thumbnail
Posted: 15 years ago
#8
michael jackson's dadused to hit him if he got a note wrong. he became arguably the biggest pop sensation ever. On the other hand, he became a junkie, a plastic surgeon's dream , alleged pedophile and died at 50.
455517 thumbnail
Posted: 15 years ago
#9
best example ever....the kids may become frustrated geniuses...
mr.ass thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Rocker Thumbnail
Posted: 15 years ago
#10

Originally posted by: lalixlili

best example ever....the kids may become frustrated geniuses...



yeah, I know of no pain, no gain.. but there's only a certain amount of pain someone can take.

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