Some days, I really wonder what happened to all the
commonsense that used to permeate parenting in the United
States . The things parents do and think
today can be rather mind-boggling, and, I think, would sound strange to our
grandparents and great-grandparents.
Let me give two examples of what I mean.
First, parents used to think that raising children is no big deal, but it is a big responsibility.
Today, you often hear mothers say that raising children is
the hardest thing they’ve ever done. What that statement misses is that raising
kids is not hard—we’ve made it much more difficult than it needs to be by
flipping the equation. Now we think raising children is a big deal and if we
don’t do it right, they won’t get into college and have a good job and a
career, and other apocalyptic thinking.
Second, parents used to take
child rearing seriously but not children seriously.
Children do the strangest, silliest things. Haven’t you
found some of the things they do plain old hilarious? If not, then you’re not
alone. Collectively, we’ve lost our sense of humor and delight in what children
do and say.
Instead, we view children very seriously, and often
over-react to the things that are typical weird kid things. For example, when
one of my daughters was around five, I saw her licking the wall down the
hallway.
Now, some parents would have played detective and asked her
why she was licking the wall. Maybe she wasn’t getting enough salt? Maybe she’s
upset about something? However, I knew that kids just do the darnest things and
simply told her to stop licking the wall—and shared a chuckle with my husband
about it later.
Getting back to commonsense on this type of thinking means
you view child rearing as a big—and serious—responsibility, but that you don’t
view it as particularly hard, nor do you take what your kids do too seriously. Above
all, remember to enjoy your kids and all the strange, weird, head-scratching
things they do.
Until next time,
Sarah
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