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Segment: 'You Must Be a Parent, a Friend, a Guide' - The Three Roles Every Child Needs You to Play

Segment: 'You Must Be a Parent, a Friend, a Guide' - The Three Roles Every Child Needs You to Play

Published 1 week, 6 days ago
Description

From parental control to emotional presence to the brutal truth about why being a parent means being a friend, a guide, and a mentor all at once - and why children who can't get support at home will seek guidance from complete strangers you have no control over, the young boy at work doing AI research who sent a long WhatsApp message explaining that anytime he comes around it's not because he has nothing to do but because he's found a new interest and wants to work part-time while still in school, when the parents don't get it and it's troubling the child so now he's talking to someone his parents don't even know instead of opening up at home, the son who sits for a surprise test and comes home scratching his hair saying "we had a surprise test today and it didn't go well" and instead of harsh judgment the response is laughter and the lesson that you must always be prepared because that's why it's a surprise test, and why some parents are so stuck in their ways declaring "this is what my child is going to be as far as I am paying school fees" without understanding that's not fair and that's why some children go wayward - because if they're not getting support at home they'll get it somewhere else, while the real question becomes: are you present in your child's life, do you notice when your child stays longer than usual, do you invite their friends over so you can hear their conversations and understand their personalities, because sometimes people are not looking for handouts - all they need is to be noticed and recognized, and the ultimate truth is this: your responsibility as a parent is not just financial, it is emotional, it is mental, you have to be present at all times because you have decided to be responsible for another human being.

In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with Nana Aba Anamoah - a powerhouse media personality who dismantles the dangerous "I pay the school fees so I control your future" mentality that creates distance between parents and children, revealing the exact moment when a young boy at work doing AI research sent a long WhatsApp message that couldn't be replied to for two days because he's seen a new interest and wants to work part-time while still in school but the parents don't get it, when that young boy is now talking to someone his parents don't even know because ideally if he's unhappy with something he should be able to open up to his parents but parents have put a wall between them and their children, when the son comes home from a surprise test scratching his hair saying "it didn't go well" and instead of harsh rebuke there's laughter and the lesson that you should always be prepared because that's why it's a surprise test, when reviewing the child means acknowledging "you should have done better because the previous term you did better" but also praising what went well instead of focusing only on the negative, when inviting the son's friends over means sitting with them hearing their conversations understanding their personalities and being called Nanaaba or Ro instead of auntie because they're comfortable, when some friends would call without the son's permission saying "can I come and spend the weekend at your house" and the answer is always "why not, come, be comfortable," when some would even ask "can you call my father or my mother and tell them that you want me to come" because their own parents have created fear or are just not present or not caring enough to notice.

This isn't motivational parenting talk from Instagram influencers - it's a systematic breakdown of why you must be a parent, a friend, and a guide all at once so your child is comfortable talking to you about anything without judgment, why being present means noticing when the young boy at work stays until 7 p.m. instead of leaving at 3 p.m. and saying "yo, you're still here" becaus

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