Have you been seeing those heartwarming posts floating around the internets these past couple weeks about childhood and magic and making moments count? Did you recently create a new Pinterest board specifically for crafts to do on indoor high pollen count odd numbered Thursdays? Do you constantly feel pressured via social media, your peers in the carpool pickup line, and whatever crappy article you've most recently scanned on HuffPo to be a best friend and parent?
Well, you've come to the right place.
I'm here to help you discover how you, too, can ensure that your child has the most unremarkable, mundane, tedious and pedestrian latency period possible*. Plus, craft activities.
Step 1:
Remove all forms of digital entertainment from their willing paws. Put passwords on all your devices and make up a truly ogre-caliber rule that only Mommy or Daddy can unlock the magic of media for them. When they beg for an episode of Wonder Pets at 3 pm on a Tuesday, smile cruelly and send them outside to their horrific cage of a backyard (it's fenced, after all. Oh the humanity.) and sweetly suggest they dig in the sandbox with their little brother. (The sandbox, remember, is just an area of available dirt in the side of the yard you've dumped half a bag of sand in, and it's filled with broken matchbox cars and metal measuring cups. There is no water table in sight. You are one cruel s.o.b.)
Step 2:
Speaking of little brothers…Make sure you give your child a sibling long before the socially-acceptable 3 year mark. In fact, have them so close together that they are regularly asked if they are twins. Make them share clothing with their younger sibling, ensuring that neither child every looks perfectly put together in that convenient 'in between' size that kinda sorta fits them both. Make them share a room, and when one insists on moaning himself to sleep for the better part of 20 minutes every night, tell the offended party that it's character building, and to pretend the noise is whales singing deep, deep in the ocean. Crank up the ocean effect on the sound machine just for good measure.
Step 3:
Step 4:
Step 5:
Enroll them in zero extracurricular activities. Forgo any attempts at baby sign language for your hearing child. Act excited when your preschooler's teacher assures you during a mid-year 'checkup' conference that they are learning academics in the classroom in addition to control of bodily fluids, but wonder to yourself if numbers really matter. Make a mental note to ask your kid to count to 10. Feign interest when your girlfriend casually mentions soccer practice or swim lessons, but mentally resolve to refrain from said activities for as long as socially acceptable. Pour yourself a glass of wine while your little darling is 'snorkeling' in the bathtub at 4pm and toast your good sense because hey, you've got nowhere to drive.
Step 6:
Step 7:
Throw boring birthday parties filled with friends, family, and some balloons and cake. Oh, wait, that's an awesome birthday party…but note, there are no buntings, there are mismatched paper plates and plastic cutlery in use, and the adults are drinking alcoholic beverages and mingling instead of leading the group in guided multi-sensory games and activities. There may be a piƱata, but you can bet that somebody has snuck the good chocolate out of it already. The cake may or may not be homemade, but it is fashioned in the unimaginative shape of a sheet, and the frosting is runny. It tastes amazing. The poor children are left to their own devices for the remainder of the festivities, and there is no commemorative slideshow in sight.
If you've made it this far, congratulations, you're well on your way to ensuring that your little darling has the least magical childhood imaginable!* But on the plus side, he or she will probably develop a rich imagination of their own as an escape mechanism.
(Off to Jen's for more things that come in lists of 7)
*Magical childhoods are overrated. How about getting out of the way and letting childhood work its own magic.
I LOVE THIS POST! Every young parent should read it! I am sometimes very grateful that our boys are grown, and that when we were raising them there were still plenty of people who threw "boring" birthday parties like you describe here (guilty!), made their kids share bedrooms (guilty again!), and dressed them like adorable ragamuffins (yes, guilty of that, too). All this perfection and over-the-top celebrating can't be good for kids. And there seems to be more pressure as far as that goes now than there was in the 80's and 90's when my guys were little.
ReplyDeleteAnd stay strong in your efforts to keep your kids out of organized activities and sports as long as possible!! I think any 4-year-old would have a lot more fun snorkeling in the tub than jumping in the car to go to soccer practice. We started some of the sports stuff earlier than we should have, and if there's one thing I could go back and change now, that would be it.
I applaud you!
One big, Amen, sister.
ReplyDeleteExactly, amen, preach it sister. I read something similar on HuffPost last week and just had to fist bump.
ReplyDeleteStep 2 made me laugh out loud - love it :)
ReplyDeleteFAB-U-LOUS!!! Wish I would have followed this list earlier (electronics will be the death of me...but I am just as guilty a the kids :-/ ). But as a mom of 6 ages 17, 17, 13, 7, 4, and 3, I TOTALLY agree with just about everything...especially the extracurriculars. I am right there with you on the holidays and birthday parties. My youngest kids have never even been to a birthday party (other than our little family parties which consist of a Duncan Hines cake...or Betty Crocker, whichever was on sale, a meager pile of presents that were bought 6 hours before and wrapped 30 minutes before, and the blowing out of candles that I stole from the old advent wreath because I forgot to buy birthday candles)...go ahead...call Child Protective Services.
ReplyDeleteGreat post...can't wait to read more of your writing!
Is it weird that in some way I apply all of these to my non-parental life? Great list, Jenny!
ReplyDeleteHave you read Anthony Esolen's book on the topic. 10 ways to ruin your child's imagination (or something like that). Check it out- he has a tongue in cheek style I think you would appreciate.
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ReplyDeleteI may have snorted once or twice while reading! Then I forwarded it to my friends with babies. :) Truth, sister!
ReplyDeleteYes. This, all of it. This was similar to the way I grew up and it's definitely the way my kids will!
ReplyDeletegood list.
ReplyDeleteToday I was skimming an issue of Parent's mag with the headline, "best. party. ever." When I read the statistic that something like 60% of parents admitted to spending $200 or more on their child's last birthday, my eyes rolled so hard, I almost fell over. I'm thankful my oldest has a summer birthday!
hip hip hooray! I loved this, lady. I laughed way too hard, but I also took it very seriously. How do you do it?
ReplyDeleteI just found your blog. Its fantastic!
ReplyDeletehahah - this is GREAT!!!! With 3 kids 13 months apart (one set of twins), my kids have to share clothes, and a room, and have to sleep through screaming, and they have to play outside at the park, and while I do occasionally make pancakes for dinner (hey - they are easy and yummy), my kids have to eat their veggies and love fruit. I'm not doing it perfectly... and some days I need a show to escape, but they are alive, breathing, and nothing is currently broken - so we're doing GREAT!
ReplyDeleteAmen :)
ReplyDeleteSounds like your life is very similar to mine. We have a set of Irish twins (both are 4 at the moment) and a 2.5-year-old. Great post!
ReplyDeleteChildhood anxiety
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this useful information.