Although I was once myself a child and have, indeed, known many children throughout the course of my long life - and was sometimes even in (temporary) charge of those children - no, I have never been a parent. Just a kid, a sister, an aunt, a cousin, a friend. So I don't necessarily know what I'm talking about here. But still...
The other day, late afternoon, I was walking through the Boston Public Garden when I passed a Beacon Hill mother dragging her two kids around on a little plastic sled. The kids were a little girl about 3/3.5 and her brother, who appeared to be a bit pre-one - maybe 10 or 11 months old.
Anyway, the little girl was fussy, screaming at her mother. And I do mean screaming at her mother. "Stop. I don't want to do this."
It was late in the afternoon. Kids get tired, hungry, cranky. Maybe she hadn't gotten her nap in. Maybe she was cold. Maybe she just wanted to go home. All perfectly understandable.
The mother, quite reasonably, stopped and quite reasonably, told her daughter that she could get out and walk.
"No," the little girl screamed even louder. "I don't want to get out. I want Wills to get out." Wills being her baby brother.
It struck me that there were a couple of quite reasonable responses that the mother could have made:
- She could have told her crankster little girl that she understood that she was tired, and that they'd head home.
- She could have told her crankster little girl that, sure, they could take turns being dragged around in the sled. Wills first.
What the mother did elect to do, I wouldn't have advised either.
She took little Wills out of the sled, plunked him down in the snow, and started dragging little Olivia - now perfectly delighted to be solo in the sled - around in a circle, while Wills sat there, stiff in his little snow suit, looking increasingly cranky, cold, and tired. And casting an increasingly cranky, cold, and tired eye on Olivia, gleefully enjoying the ride while her mother raced her around yelling "Whee...."
This struck me as a not particularly good solution to the problem of a cranky, cold, and tired 3/3.5 year old who just plain wanted something, and wanted something at the expense of her baby brother.
This struck me as setting this child up to think she could always get her way. To becoming someone who'd turn into what we used to call a spoiled brat.
Maybe it was a one off, a moment of maternal weakness on a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day.
I sure hope so.
But what do I know? As I said, it's not that I necessarily know what I'm talking about here.
Then there's the ad for Inspired Closets.
In this little slice-of-life-that-no-one-in-the-history-of-mankind-ever-lived, mother and daughter are in a very inspired walk-in closet that's about the size of my bedroom. Straight out of an HGTV fantasy playbook.
Mom's back is to the camera, and Sophia - six-ish - is looking sad. They're having a little heart-to-heart convo. And mom is all assurance.
Sophia, it's beautiful... You are a very, very talented girl... You're really gifted...You made many good decisions.
When the mother says "I love it," Sophia, in a moment of absolute self-awareness and truthiness, says "I don't believe you."
Wonder what Lizzie and Mary would do?
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