The Importance of NOT Letting Your Kids Be Kids.

in life •  8 years ago 

I felt it necessary to do a follow up post on "The Importance of Letting Your Kids Be Kids". The day after posting that the universe pushed the troll button to put the recently publish theory to test. Not sure if you are aware, but as a follower you should know the universe trolls me often.

We were having a daddy daughter morning letting @aprilangel sleep in a bit. I decided we should go grab some breakfast at the local chi-fil-a and play afterword for a while. Now the latter part of that was my major reason for choosing chic-fil-a, of course to my daughters and I dismay it was temporarily closed.

My daughter is just now starting to get the hang of living on earth and immediately started yelling "pay! pay!" when we walked to the dining area. There were some other children with their parents also, most likely for the same reason as me. After breakfast I got her out of the high chair and she immediately headed for the door to the play area.

Obviously she ignored the sign and to my surprise pulled the door open and started to go in. I followed her with the intent of letting her investigate a bit and then do my best to explain it was closed and we would play somewhere else. Almost immediately an employee ran over to tell us it was closed and we could not go in.

S#!T hit the fan, immediately my daughter went into a full blown melt down as she was denied the fun right in front of her baby eye balls. I am sure everyone in the restaurant heard the cries for fun as I walked her flailing back to our table. Within moments a lady walked over to shower promotional gifts to her. As you can see below it worked well, she is a little shy so a smiling face giving her stuff was a good distraction from the intense grief.

The closed play place was a perfect moment where I could not "let her be a kid". Not sure how the situation could have been avoided or play out differently. Just a lesson for both of us in the balance between desire and social responsibility. Would have been nice had the employee given me a moment to bribe her with the chance to go see some "kitties" at the nearby pet shop.

The rest of our morning went well and the "kitties" were lots of fun, seems like they are a lot more active in the morning. I sometimes feel the pressure in society to wrangle my child and force her to be quit or sit still. This theme of her being "bad" or "good" seems to come up a lot. My father @richardd and @aprilangel had an issue once where he referred to as being bad for not eating her breakfast. She quickly pointed out that even though she may have done something bad that she herself was not bad.

This is an important thing to distinguish and I am glad she corrected my father. Language like that can create a self fulfilling prophecy where after repeatedly being told you are bad, you then become bad. Instead, positive affirmation works much better in my opinion.

I feel this type of parenting leads to negative inner dialog and right wrong thinking. If you are reading this please start paying attention on how you talk to yourself. A good practice is to take the things your say to yourself and imagine another person saying it to you. How would that make you feel? You can also reverse that and imagine saying it to someone else. There is nothing wrong with constructive criticism and critical thinking but there is no reason to beat yourself up.

In closing I plan to do my best to respect the freedom of my daughter and let her explore the world around her as much as possible preventing harm to herself or others. We came across a super well behaved child at a restaurant recently and his parents seemed religious. I couldn't help but feel there was a cost to his complacency that will possibly show up later in life. I would much rather have a wild child and an adventurous adult than a good child and that becomes a wall flower later in life.

Thanks for reading, any comments are appreciated as support goes a long way.

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Interesting theories. Not all good children become adult wall flowers. Boundaries have to be learned sooner or later. Just use your gut. If it feels wrong, it probably is.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Off topic but i have to say they are doing a really good job at the new location tho i went to the drive thru 2 days after they opened and it went pretty smooth.

We had completely different experiences, I ordered a bacon egg biscuit with no cheese and got a muffin. Asked for them to fix it and they brought me a bacon, egg, and cheese biscuit. Asked them to fix that and got a sausage biscuit the third time. Gave up at that point, its whatever, sure they will get it sorted out.

Wow lol maybe the morning shift just sucks

They were definitely in training, its possible they may have gotten the hang of it by the time you got there. Not a lot going on with that job, I am sure a day of training covers 80% of it.

I see you are getting your notifications though.

Yup

I have two comments on your post. One is very sad and the other positive. I will start with the positive first since it seems to be the general theme of your posting. Positive affirmation is amazing! It does work and it does help build self confidence. Check out my introduction video to see the most recent project I worked on; it's a positive affirmation tool for an app! It should be available really soon. Building character of course is the goal for every parent child relationship, sometimes they child yours more than you even realize. The sad story. If a play area is closed please please block it off properly, keep doors locked and gates closed. My first patient death was a young child who had fallen in broken playground equipment at a fun place that was suppose to be closed at the time. The devastation was tremendous on what was suppose to be an innocent fun day. I couldn't place the blame on the family, if the young child could access it so easily it obviously wasn't closed or under repair in that poor babies eyes. Children are curious and it's great to let them be their natural curious wonderful selves just don't rely on big cooperations to keep your child from harm. Beautiful daughter btw.

I suggested they cover the windows with paper until it was fixed. Would cost next to nothing and remove the temptation.

That was kind of you. Could have literally saved a kids life. It's the little things that make the most impact on people.

Interesting read. Our child is approaching seven now, and ... [self-censor, in case the universe is reading]. Anyway, I don't necessarily think that meltdowns are a natural part of childhood. They happen, sure, but please, universe, let there be a happy middle ground between the meltdown prone, and the quiet and over-schooled. I think that Taoist thing, dancing on running water, is a bit like parenting: walking-past-the-icecream-shop-just-before-lunch, a nice ideal but next to impossible.

Natural childhood is a topic of mine for a future post. I started to add on the topic in this post but it does not fit. I want to go into letting our two year old watch dvd's in the car. People have mixed thoughts on the topic of screen time as they want kids to be in a natural state of examining the world around them. Well when strapped into a car seat unable to move for sometimes nearly an hour moving at high speeds down a paved road I dont think the natural state is one of staring strait ahead at nothing.

Our youngest was a nightmare on car trips even 20 minutes or less, now she is excited to leave so she can watch some show.

We're more or less relaxed about screen time, especially at weekends, and the huge upside of this is that at six he sometimes now says, well that's enough , I want to do some drawing. From what I understand, the biggest parenting challenge is at 16, and anything that gives them a chance to learn self-discipline, and painfree self-determination, before then has got to be worthwhile.

I once heard anything you waste time doing that you enjoy is not wasted time. I spent a lot of evenings playing zelda as a kid and feel it had a lot of positive impact on my problem solving skills along with the patience of trial and error. Lucky for me my parents didnt care I stayed up all night playing. I can see how that would have played out differently with other parents.