Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change - Family - Nairaland
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| Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by lagostrendboy(op): 1:18am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Parenting in Nigeria is often guided by traditional norms and practices passed down through generations. While these methods were rooted in cultural values and the best intentions, some have proven to be detrimental to children’s emotional and psychological well-being. It’s essential to recognize and address these toxic parenting habits to foster healthier relationships and environments for the next generation. Eyes Of Lagos reports,https://eyesoflagos.com/2025/04/24/unlearning-toxic-nigerian-parenting-habits-a-call-for-change/
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| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by RenoOkriTheGoat: 6:39am On Apr 24, 2025 |
That No.3 is very necessary. The rod should never be spared. It's this attitude of copying the western world that has made many GenZ children to turn bad. Today, no respect. A little boy or girl of 9 will be talking to an elder anyhow. Go to some of these so-called posh schools and see how kids talk to their teachers. Nonsense! |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by crusufixo(m): 6:39am On Apr 24, 2025*. Modified: 7:08am On Apr 24, 2025 |
But quite frankly, these were practices used by our parents, and 98% of us turned out all right. The changes in the world now is all the more reason we need more of the style used by our parents. I mean, kids these days are pampered, lazy, not street smart,too choosy,don't mature on time. It's just crazy. Of course, the old parenting style should not be totally implemented, there can be some exceptions and flexibility. but my candid opinion still stands, the kids these days need the old parenting style |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Omexonomy: 6:40am On Apr 24, 2025 |
another point is paying for SSCE Exam malpractice for children at the age of 13 years to 14 years so they will get 9As and proceed to a private University to obtain Bsc 2. Equating Academic Excellence with Self-Worth A prevalent belief is that only top academic performers are valuable. Phrases like “If you’re not first, you’re nothing” place immense pressure on children, often leading to anxiety and a fear of failure. This narrow focus on grades overlooks other talents and passions a child may possess. Recognizing and nurturing diverse abilities can lead to more fulfilled and well-rounded individuals. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by PheelzAlmighty: 6:40am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Y'all jobless or something ![]() |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by BABANGBALI: 6:40am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Omexonomy:na Tinubu now |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Ladiesdoctor(m): 6:41am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Giving such freedom to children has successfully rendered the society to what it is today. Generation Z Z Compare the moral conduct of the 70s, 80s, 90s and now |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by DLSReigns(m): 6:41am On Apr 24, 2025 |
My question is: when you compare products of these 'archaic' traditional practices to those birthed by the so called free world, I say we are faring just fine, if not better off. Homes where they have spared the rod, can testify to the regrets! |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Pygmalionn: 6:41am On Apr 24, 2025 |
When I was younger I thought my parents were wrong, Now I understand better.. You think parents are wrong ? Wait until you become one.. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by ojuu4u(m): 6:42am On Apr 24, 2025*. Modified: 7:02am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Number 3 is out of it. SPARE THE ROD AND DESTROY YOUR CHILD. These little kids,many a times, they need cane for them to behave normally, don't use it to brutalise, but to chastise. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by papyjaypaul: 6:42am On Apr 24, 2025*. Modified: 7:50am On Apr 24, 2025 |
I agree with most of them but number 7, I disagree with it. I also think we should be careful how we condemn parenting because they parented with the best information available to them while the world is changing. For example, number 6 about career choice is not exactly their fault. It was part of protecting family prestige and out of love they wanted you to choose certain career paths. This is what colonialism did to us and it is common in Africa and Asia. Go to TikTok today and check Asian parenting, you'll see that they are similar. The colonialists controlled the ecomomy and for you to do well in life, your parents insisted on certain career paths because they are also paying for your education. In western countries, if you don't come from a well to do family, you won't smell college, not to talk of university. E get why we be say Nigerians are one of the most highly educated immigrants in the United States. Also parents didn't think you had seen life, that's why they chose some path for you. I remember Falz and Funke Akindele said their parents made them study law even if they did not want it. Look at them today, Falz is good with entertainment contracts and copyright, talent is not enough there. Education helped him even if he could not see it. Those are things parents insisted on and it is not toxic. If you spare the rod, you are on your own. Discipline is lacking today and I tell you that you can't give children too much freedom. It takes 20+ years for your brains to mature, so what are we talking about? I just posted in another thread about parents not being prepared for the 21st century challenges. Parenting is serious business and if you can't manage it, please don't get anyone pregnant. papyjaypaul:
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| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Antwan9(m): 6:42am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Nigerian kids are different from 1st word kids. Higher class, middle class and lower class play a significant role in the discipline methods in Nigeria. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Image123(m): 6:43am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Hmmm. The ones you want to follow have produced Gen Z. People that can be depressed at any time t and commit suicide or go on killing sprees for any reason r. Let's continue oh. You can't eat your cake and have it. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Sabadon(m): 6:43am On Apr 24, 2025 |
those were some of the values that made us who we re today, tho some need modification. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by cr7lomo: 6:43am On Apr 24, 2025*. Modified: 9:07am On Apr 24, 2025 |
U posted crap... we always wanna copy Americans and western Europe... African way of parenting is no different from places like Asia , the middle east , Eastern Europe and South America...children in the western world are nothing to write home about due to their parenting style ... look at the number of high school shooting in USA... giving children freedom will lead to doom... |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by jowhyte(m): 6:45am On Apr 24, 2025 |
You can't give a 5yrs old your car keys to drive all because you love the child else he will crash both the car and kpai his/herself. These GenZ want a life without accountability, discipline and control under the cloak of mental health. No wonder many of them are turning to something else. Many of the western countries are beginning to realize their mistakes and trying to correct these avoidable mistakes. Imagine labouring and toiling morning till night for 20 - 25yrs making huge investment here and there and child will tell you God and his parent made mistakes birthing them as boy or girl and want to change gender and would not want to be useful to his/herself and contribute positively to the society except by being wayward all in the name of freedom to do useless things that make them happy? Give birth first, by the time your kids start showing bad behaviours and complain from everywhere start coming when other well behaved kids are doing themselves, parents and society proud, then it will done on you. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by RenoOkriTheGoat: 6:46am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Ladiesdoctor:Don't mind these so-called woke people. Destroying the society with rubbish copy copy. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by MoneyMan5: 6:50am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Sabadon:What are you today? A nation full of thieves and drug dealers |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by correctguy101(m): 6:50am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Just don't take it too far... Like my landlord in those years in Ajegunle... The eediots would light up a stove, lower it and force his own biological children to sit on it bare-bottom... Plus him and his wicked wife were the very reasons those children steal... As they hardly feed or care for them... My own parents will adequately punish misbehaviour but never to any extremes. Even, na me dey do shakara say I no go eat if dem beat me and my elder sis go still beat me until I agree to eat, lolz... My mum was soft on me. If not for my elder sister, I might've become a real Ajegunle pikin... Some would mistake ya advice for letting children loose. Even this ancestor never allowed my daughter to be too free. African man like me no go allow my pikin behave like all those eediots copying western lifestyle... They cannot coy anything innovative but na mumu way of life dem go rush copy claiming wokeness, awón òní yéyé Just guide ya children right and do all you can to instill values that are up building for self and society. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by ERCROSS(m): 6:50am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Great article except the point encouraging African parents to spare the rod Una sha wan train African children the western way Use the rod when necessary |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by papyjaypaul: 6:51am On Apr 24, 2025 |
MoneyMan5:I hear this all the time but it is still not an excuse. The parents of the past were concerned about morals and values, even though the 10% are leading the country to ruins. It's still better than no guardrails at all. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by SAMBARRY: 6:55am On Apr 24, 2025*. Modified: 7:16am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Many parents who are in their 60s upwards especially the men are full scale narcissists and they don't even realise it.they want respect to the point of human worship but they're not ready or interested in giving back the respect they demand. The way they even fight for respect is super disgusting and a turn off.i saw one yesterday when I was talking with a friend and I was intentionally elongating the discussion with friend so he can go because he has thi annoying habit of always talking to people he considers younger in a condescending way. I no even know say he dey wait for me for junction because he was so thirsty for a conversation and he said "sambarry did you not see me" I had to give him a fake smile and apology and keep it moving because he was already creating a scene and raising his voice ,reporting me to everyone that cared to listen.normally greeting him or any elder is not a problem. Infact I usually give elders their due respect and honour but when you start acting brash,lousy and entitled omo I give the elder space .this is one thing a lot of senior citizens in their 60s upwards don't realise. Respect is like trust, you cannot fight someone to give you, if you do you end up raising pretenders/actors as children or subordinates and that's why many of them greet their bosses or senior citizens with pretense, no genuine honour for them and then wink their nose behind them. I'll give another example .if we are in a bus and there's no sit available and there's a senior citizen around (I mean 60 years upwards) I will naturally stand up (without him asking ) and say sir/ma please sit down.i will give him my sit willingly but if you come and say " hey stand up,I have children like you.why should I be standing and you're sitting,children of this generation yady yady yady.wallahi I will never stand up because you are fighting for respect without giving it.thats why thei6 children will be pretending for them and be forming Saint but the moment they leave their parents house, they exhibit their own full character because they don't even respect their own children. If you want to know how narcissistic parents of 60s upwards are,you just finish university and not get a job under their roof. You go dey drink insults morning and night they'll talk down on you in public and private. They can even slap you in public sef.some of them ate good parents but a handful of them are very very much narcissistic |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by Newyorkitis(m): 6:57am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Number 1 is very important. Children are more curious than adults. Please don't stifle their voices because it will impact on their critical thinking skills and confidence later on in life. They won't be able to speak up against injustices against themselves because the believe keeping quiet is the best thing to do. To make it worse, when they criticise the government, people will say they are rude to their father's mate. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by UrPapa: 6:57am On Apr 24, 2025 |
PheelzAlmighty:na the “y’all” make this ur comment funny me |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by correctguy101(m): 6:57am On Apr 24, 2025 |
RenoOkriTheGoat:Don't mind them my brother.. always copying rubbish from abroad like accent, lifestyle that doesn't add any improvement to anything.. Some people seem to forget we're made and wired differently.... The ways of the African man can never be the same... I can hardly find the African people imitating the way the Chinese do. The Chinese copy intelligently. They copy ya great achievement and make their own achievements. Only African man go like copy what can't improve their life... |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by themanderon: 6:58am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Our tendency to follow the failed western ways of doing things is what has led to so many ill bred, ill-mannered louts we have as kids teenagers and adults today. An example is that beast of a girl that literally tore her lecturer to shreds at unizik. We were disciplined as kids and I appreciate my parents for being firm in love. Many of us would have turned into something else if not for their training. We are Africans and should return to the ways our parents trained us. The western world is full of mentally weak, psychologically depressed, children who resort to antisocial behavior and even suicide if they don't have their way. They stopped corporal punishment in South Africa, go there today and see their teens fighting their teachers and losing their morality. Teenage pregnancy and HIV infestation is the result. Damn with this woke culture. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by correctguy101(m): 7:00am On Apr 24, 2025 |
PheelzAlmighty:Nah You should understand there are various ways to hustle in life... There are some of us on here who work strictly from home. Not me though... Lazy me has decided not to go to my office today. I rest like that as there are people to take care of things for me as I'm really lazy ![]() |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by correctguy101(m): 7:02am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Omexonomy:Makes sense... But we know better now. |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by omoredia: 7:06am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Its not toxic. A child will never turn out right without discipline |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by nams77: 7:08am On Apr 24, 2025 |
RenoOkriTheGoat:Exactly what I wanted to say. Flogging moderately must continue. That's what shaped us into resilient and useful entities today. I look at this coming generation and I shudder! Spineless, uncouth, lazy, low drive, low self esteem. Girl break your heart u rush go commit suicide. In our time it was unheard of! Tufiakwa!! |
| Re: Unlearning Toxic Nigerian Parenting Habits: A Call For Change by correctguy101(m): 7:09am On Apr 24, 2025 |
Image123:Our point exactly.... It all degrade to anyhow anyhow senselessness... |
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