One more parenting article. This too was so good I had to share. It kind of goes along with my Mother's Day issues.
by Kara Baskin May 10, 2012
09:30 PM
It’s so tempting to get riled up by
the Mommy Wars, isn’t it? The Time magazine cover story about extreme parenting, Are You
Mom Enough?, featuring a beautiful mother in skinny jeans nursing her
preschool-aged son, is infamous by now. It made me, along with the rest of the
Internet, explode with righteous indignation. Mom enough? How dare
they! This isn't a contest! But, wait ... what if it is? And I don't even own
skinny jeans!
The story also made me think about
what I wanted to teach Andrew—I mean really teach him. I’m not talking about
the trendy must-dos that crop up each year about feeding and sleeping and
discipline, insecurity porn concocted just in time to fill a fresh generation
of parents with self-doubt.
No, I’m talking about the things that I want to
impart in average, totally inextreme moments, when my breasts are covered and
my skinny jeans are in the wash.
Here’s my wish list.
I hope I raise a child who says
“thank you” to the bus driver when he gets off the bus, “please” to the waiter
taking his order at the restaurant, and holds the elevator doors when someone’s
rushing to get in.
I hope I raise a child who loses
graciously and wins without bragging. I hope he learns that disappointments are
fleeting and so are triumphs, and if he comes home at night to people who love
him, neither one matter. Nobody is keeping score, except sometimes on Facebook.
I hope I raise a child who is kind
to old people.
I hope I raise a child who realizes
that life is unfair: Some people are born rich or gorgeous. Some people really
are handed things that they don’t deserve. Some people luck into jobs or wealth
that they don’t earn. Tough.
I hope I raise a child who gets what
he wants just often enough to keep him optimistic but not enough to make him
spoiled.
I hope I raise a child who knows
that he’s loved and special but that he’s not the center of the universe and
never, ever will be.
I hope I raise a child who will
stick up for a kid who’s being bullied on the playground. I also hope I raise a
child who, if he’s the one being bullied, fights back. Hard. Oh, and if he’s
the bully? I hope he realizes that his mother, who once wore brown plastic
glasses and read the phonebook on the school bus, will cause him more pain than
a bully ever could.
I hope I raise a child who relishes
life’s tiny pleasures—whether it’s a piece of music, or the color of a gorgeous
flower, or Chinese takeout on a rainy Sunday night.
I hope I raise a child who is
open-minded and curious about the world without being reckless.
I hope I raise a child who doesn’t
need to affirm his self-worth through bigotry, snobbery, materialism, or
violence.
I hope I raise a child who likes to
read.
I hope I raise a child who is
courageous when sick and grateful when healthy.
I hope I raise a child who begins
and ends all relationships straightforwardly and honorably.
I hope I raise a child who can spot
superficiality and artifice from a mile away and spends his time with people
and things that feel authentic to him.
I hope I raise a child who makes
quality friends and keeps them.
I hope I raise a child who realizes
that his parents are flawed but loves them anyway.
And I hope that if my child turns
out to be a colossal screw-up, I take it in stride. I hope I remember that he’s
his own person, and there’s only so much I can do. He is not an appendage to be
dangled from my breasts on the cover of a magazine, his success is not my ego’s
accessory, and I am not Super Mom.
I hope for all of these things, but
I know this: None of these wishes has a thing to do with how I feed him or
sleep-train him or god-knows-what-else him. Which is how I know that these
fabricated “wars” are phony every step of the way. I do not need the expensive
stroller. I do not need to go into mourning if my "sleep-training method"
is actually a "prayer ritual" that involves tiptoeing around the
house in the dark. This is not a test. It’s a game called Extreme Parenting,
and you can’t lose if you don’t play. And, really, why would you play? You have
children to raise.
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