Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 (
azurelunatic) wrote2003-06-06 03:14 pm
Peeves (things I have generally managed to avoid)
The one thing that I could not stand when I was a kid was parents lying to their kids. I was not, as a rule, lied to. I was told an age-appropriate truth, always with the knowledge that it was not the complete truth, and I would learn more about things as I got older.
My parents tried the tooth fairy thing, and it worked -- until my mother gave me a quarter she had found lying on the floor. It was my quarter, and there was a spot on it so I knew it was mine, and the tooth fairy had given me my own quarter.
I angrily confronted my mother (I was five or younger at this point) and she admitted that yes, she was the tooth fairy, and that there was no physical little fairy that came around and did the tooth thing. I was mad at her for lying to me.
It's one thing to tell a kid that the stove is dangerous and they should not touch it until they are trained in its proper use. It is another thing to tell a kid that the stove has a monster that will hurt them if they go near it.
It may be frustrating as all get-out to tell a kid that they can't understand some of these things yet. Better that a kid be frustrated and try to learn more than intimidated or scared by a deliberately flawed understanding of how the world works.
My parents tried the tooth fairy thing, and it worked -- until my mother gave me a quarter she had found lying on the floor. It was my quarter, and there was a spot on it so I knew it was mine, and the tooth fairy had given me my own quarter.
I angrily confronted my mother (I was five or younger at this point) and she admitted that yes, she was the tooth fairy, and that there was no physical little fairy that came around and did the tooth thing. I was mad at her for lying to me.
It's one thing to tell a kid that the stove is dangerous and they should not touch it until they are trained in its proper use. It is another thing to tell a kid that the stove has a monster that will hurt them if they go near it.
It may be frustrating as all get-out to tell a kid that they can't understand some of these things yet. Better that a kid be frustrated and try to learn more than intimidated or scared by a deliberately flawed understanding of how the world works.

no subject
Why can't the majority of parents be like this?
no subject
I'm finally becoming convinced that I might be a good parent.
no subject
That's probably true, but I suspect for many parents it's because they never bothered to try. Especially the parents of the little kids I'd see in Greenock, back home, that were destined to grow up into neds.
> I'm finally becoming convinced that I might be a good parent.
Well, I've known you for... how many days? :o) and I'm fairly convinced that you'd be a good parent. :o)
no subject
no subject
I wasn't sure which was more appropriate: 'you are' or 'you would be', there. Decided on the latter. :o)
no subject
I am still uncertain about my parenting skills as it comes to babies. The younger a kid is, the more useless I find it; I can't relate well to something that can't think that should be able to. I have very few pre-rational memories of myself.
no subject
Be honest, because as you have already experienced, children take things like Santa and the tooth fairy as a deep betrayal when they find out their parents have actually *LIED* to them. Be consistent. There's nothing that can hurt a child more than inconsistent rules, because you are an arbitrary dictator (a benevolent dictator, to be sure, and dictating out of love and for their own good, but a dictator nonetheless, until they are old enough to comprehend and help create their own rules...and *that* is closer to 12 than 5) and it will only cause stress and confusion if the rules change on them.
And that's all any child needs. Honesty, consistency, love, and boundaries, in about equal proportions. :D And LIBERAL doses of fun.
no subject
He's old enough, and bright enough, to understand that when I'm grouchy and tired, the rules change, with regard to what he's allowed to do noise-wise and requiring-me-to-supervise-wise, because I tell him that the reason he's not going to be allowed to do that right now is not because he's been misbehaving, but because I'm tired and grouchy. So now he asks, if he's asking to come in my room, "Can I come in your room? Or am I grounded from your room? Or is it messy? Or are you grouchy?"
The rules remain consistent for each mode of operation, and when he knows what they are, he can adjust once he knows what's going on, and he knows to ask, because I tell him...
no subject
Re:
no subject
I suppose it's because we had a one-room cabin growing up that I remember Mama always being there to play with me 100% of the time. But I know, now, that it must be one of those illusions...