However, I was told my my 25-year old daughter that when she pulled up to pick him up and saw the jeans and polo she told him, "You’re not going to an Easter Vigil in that outfit. He explained that he had a shirt, but he does not know how to iron. She stepped out of the car and went inside to iron her brother’s shirt. He exchanged the jeans for black slacks and put on the shirt that his sister ironed for him.
Sounds like you’re an excellent father!:clapping:
The point that I’m making is where did they learn this? You guessed it. At home . . . . Since they were young they wore appropriate clothing for school, play, visits to grandma, travel and church. There were paly clothes, casuals, dress clothes, church clothes and other outfits. We were not rich. We purchased most of our clothing at Target. The school clothign were uniforms. Despite being a single dad, I taught them to separate their clothes according to context.
I shudder when I hear parents say that they can’t get their teens to dress appropriately for school, church or other. I never had to beat my kids, yell or punish. I simply had expectations and rules. My daughter wore her first sleeveless blouse at age 18, with my permission. Prior to that she wore polos, t-shirts and blouses. My son has never worn a tank-top. His shorts were always a few fingers above the knees and at the waist, not his bum. His shoes and sneakers were worn with socks. Sandals were worn at the beach To this day, he does not leave his room without a shirt, unless he’s making a mad dash for the fridge. He’s in college and he wears jeans and t-shirts, with socks and sneakers and NO offensive language or images on them. The only exception that he has been allowed to have is his hair. I don’t like his long hair, but you have to give some room for “rebellion”. I call it picking one’s battles.
A “rebellion” is part of leaving the nest, healthily. My daughter’s rebellion was a tattoo on her back - but she paid attention to my talking about the health aspects of the process of getting a tattoo, at least. I would imagine she’ll want it taken off fairly soon (it’s grown on it’s own when she was pregnant each time), but
Today, I live in a friary and they live on their own. My daughter has her own place and my son is at college. But they have rules that they follow and I don’t think that they even think of them as rules. I believe they are programmed since childhood.
Well, we were programmed in childhood and I don’t think of that as rules. Another word for programming children is “socialization”.
On a final note, there is one funny anectdote. Once, when my daughter was about 17 she went shopping with some friends who tried to get her to purchase a halter. She told her friends that she could not purchase it for two reasons, 1) she didn’t like them and 2) she would have to leave the county or her father would knock her head into next week and then burn the halter. The point is that the mores and consequences were very clear.


When adults don’t have the mores and consequences clear, how do we expect the younger generation to do so. I’m not sure that dress codes for church are enough. We need Catholic parenting classes too.
That’s probably true, however I think the people who came to those classes would be the ones who don’t really need it. “Preaching to the choir” is the phrase that comes to mind.
As I said, I can leave my young adults kids alone to live out their lives and join a religious community, because I have done my job. The rest is up to them.
And it sounds like you’ve done that better than many.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF