Last week we were having dinner with a couple of good friends whom we haven’t seen in a while because of distance. As we sat around and chated while watching our kids play together after dinner, she turned to me and asked, “Alfred, you wrote that the past few years have totally transformed how you look at marriage and parenting. What’s the most important lesson that you learned when it comes to being a parent?”
As I thought about that, my mind automatically started replaying moments in my life spent with my parents or with Taylor that taught me what being a parent is about. It occured to me that parenting is done in “moments”. As it is with me and my parents, after my daughter has grown up, the lasting legacy of parenting that she receives from us is not going to be a series of speeches nor a set of philosophies. What she will take with her through the rest of her life is a collection of memories, of moments we spent together that taught her about life, about love, about pain, and all the other things that truly matter in the end.
As I thought about how to answer my friend’s question, I remembered one particular phone call I received from my Dad at the lowest, darkest time during the past few years. He called to ask me how I was, and he said to me, “Son, life is full of peaks and valleys. You will bounce back from this. You will rise again. Don’t quit.” With that, he hung up.
The same words coming from anybody else’ mouth would have probably sounded hallow to me. But when my Dad said it, I immediately remembered seeing how he dealt with his own times of failures and difficulties in his life. I remembered how Dad faced up to them and took responsibility; how he refused to quit, even when it would have been so easy to do so. How he kept getting back up after life knocked him down. And when Dad said those words to me, I found myself thinking, “Yes. I can do this. I will rise again. Just like Daddy.”
And there it was. The most valuable lesson I learned about parenting. In our success driven Chinese culture, we think the most important job of a parent is to prepare our children for success. We send them to the best schools, sign them up for extra tutoring, pay for the best piano teachers, make sure that they get into the most prestigious universities, and so on. There’s nothing wrong with that, of course. but I learned that perhaps the most important job I have as a father is not how to prepare Taylor to succeed, but to teach her how to fail.
The truth is, the path of her life will be shaped and defined more by how she handles failure than how she deals with success. And I learned something else: There are a number of people who can help her to succeed in the different arenas of life: teachers, tutors, mentors, coaches, etc. But when it comes to learning how to fail, there are unique lessons that only I, as her father can teach her. If she doesn’t learn it from me, she will not learn it anywhere else.
Yet another note to file away in the “things learned along the way” folder.

{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }
What you wrote is so true. The current trend of “helicopter” style of parenting (read: hovering) means we often try to protect our kids from any negative experiences, to shield them from disappointment or not wanting them to fail. And yet, we know they will have to deal with all these things in their lives at one point or another. I am also very guilty of being overprotective. It would be great if we can teach our kids how to face failures with grace, tenacity, and a positive attitude. But I suspect we as parents will have to learn that ourselves before we can pass it on.
Hey Alfred
!
Eugene recommended your website and gosh, what a good find! I’ve been catching up on various posts that you have on here, and I’m sure you hear this from everybody who reads this, but what an inspiring collection of honest and raw writings you’ve allowed readers to access!
Your writings reinforce what I’m learning more and more in my life – there is no linear way of living the “right, Christian” way. I really appreciate this post about parenting and how a father/family can teach, because I find it so applicable to my life. I think back to how my parents have and are continuing to raise me, and it’s not just the opportunities they strived so hard to give me, but it’s the time that we spend together sharing about our lives that makes me a strong believer that there is genuine Love in the world. It challenges you to question what is the purpose of my actions and what is the backbone of what makes me human?
Anyways, really looking forward to your concert on Saturday!
Thanks Joeie! Hey, I never knew this is how you spell your name
I am glad you and Eug enjoy reading the material on the site! We are looking forward to Saturday for sure…so happy that you guys can make it!! See you then!!
Alfred this is the first time I have read anything of yours. This was sent to me by a friend who knows I am having a hard time. It was precious and brought back memories of my father. What your father said to you mine would say to me. He never gave up until the very end. He had Austrialia’s 1st quadruple by-pass in 1979 and they gave him 3 years to live. He told the surgeon that “I’ll outlive you mate”. He was national ;president of the War Vets Assn of Australia until he passed away in October 2008.
Thank you for reminding me that he would never want me to give up and I look forward to reading more of your enlightening articles.
My sincere thanks
Lesley
Dear Lesley
Thank you so much for your kind words! It is my hope that the blog will be a source of encouragement to others and a reminder that we do not journey alone. Keep going!
Alfred
Hi Alfred,
I am looking forward to tonight’s concert.
I agreed that many parents wish success for their kids but I think no matter whether they are successful or not (by the way, not everybody can be successful according to today’s standard), the key whether they are happy (or satisfied) or not. Many successful people are not happy today and many “unsuccessful” are pretty happy.
There are professors at Harvard, some even have won a Nobel prize but they are not happy because they have not satisfied the desire nor reach the standard of their “unsatisfiable” parents. To my surprise and sad to say, many of these professors’ parents are already long gone but their demand for their children have kept them in this unhappy state even until now.
What do we seek for our children, to be someone that they couldn’t or just be themselves and be happy!
I want to confirm what your dad said to you, you will bounce back, don’t quit!”
I went to the concert with my wife last night and I think it worth every minute that I spend in the room. After the concert, we (Me and my wife) talked about what we heard, we shared about how we felt…Alfred and Anna, both of you are great, not in the sense of your ability (although both of you are very good in speech and in music) but in your personality. I think that is what counts in live.
One thing I regret in the whole evening is that I didn’t bring Kleenex or napkins or may be a towel with me!
Well, at the end, somehow I heard that you told us that there will be more this kind of concerts, I do look forward to that. I am not your “fan” but I am you “friend” and after all, we are one family!
Thank you, Alfred and Anna, I am sure both of you have touched many lives and I am sure both of you will continue to touch many more!! Keep going.