minoanmiss: A little doll dressed as a Minoan girl (Minoan Child)
minoanmiss ([personal profile] minoanmiss) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2019-12-03 12:27 pm

Dear Care & Feeding: I'm judging my friend's parenting.

Dear Care and Feeding,

I’m a middle-aged woman who has very little experience with children. I don’t dislike children; it just never worked out for me to become a mother. Anyway, for the last couple of years, I’ve been trying to be supportive of a friend and her almost 5-year-old daughter, “Skylar.” The girl’s father is now out of the picture, and my friend is struggling to cope as a single mom. They previously went through a good deal of trauma with domestic violence issues, CPS involvement, and so on.

Skylar can be a really sweet child, but she is very demanding of constant attention. Also, she has unbelievable meltdowns if she doesn’t get her way. For example, the last time they were over for dinner, Skylar threw a complete fit when it was time for them to go home. I realize all kids have an occasional meltdown, but this didn’t seem normal. I don’t recall my nieces and nephews ever having full-on temper tantrums after the age of 3.

After the first few minutes, her crying seemed manipulative to me, even forced. For example, her cries would start to taper off as she wore out, but as soon as her mother looked over at her, she would immediately start up again as loud as she could. This went on for what seemed like forever, although it was probably more like 10 minutes. Finally I just grabbed Skylar’s shoes and told her that she was going home right now, whether she liked it or not. My friend literally dragged her out of the house kicking and screaming.

In retrospect, I think I did pretty much what my mom would have done in this situation, but my mom did a lot of things that I think would be frowned on now, like being mean and smacking us. I know that Skylar probably has some issues, although I also think that she is a bit spoiled and my friend is very passive with her behavior. (My friend’s response was to plead quietly for Skylar to stop crying and promising her things she could do when they got home.) But as I said at the beginning, I don’t have much experience with children, so I’m really clueless about the best approach here. I would greatly appreciate your advice and insight!

—Not How My Mom Would Have Done It


Dear NHMMWHDI,

What you’re experiencing is an extremely common phenomenon. People without kids look at the parenting of others with kids and HAVE SOME OPINIONS. I say that not to diminish it, but to let you know that such opinions are natural and normal and not necessarily evidence of a problem. In other words, just because you feel like your friend should be parenting differently doesn’t mean that your friend should be parenting differently.

I will also tell you that almost all 5-year-olds can absolutely use crying and emotional blackmail to get what they want. They cannot, however, be “manipulative,” because that word implies a conscious willingness to harm another for personal gain. This, of course, is not what they’re doing. They’re just trying to do what works. And they know that sometimes crying works, so they cry. I would be careful to avoid assigning nefarious motives to the behavior of preschoolers.

Just because you feel like your friend should be parenting differently doesn’t mean that your friend should be parenting differently.

This isn’t to say that your friend is the perfect parent and it’s all good. It’s more about how you can support her as a friend. Telling her how to parent is not it. She and her child have been through hell, it sounds like, and they don’t need judgmental adults adding to the weight of their experiences. Parenting is a long game, and a highly imperfect one, and I’m willing to bet that your friend is capable of raising a good child—of righting her own parenting wrongs and changing direction when necessary—even without your advice. I’m also willing to bet that her daughter is capable of becoming a perfectly fine person by overcoming her mom’s parenting mistakes. It’s what you did. It’s what we all do.

Support your friend. If you see her struggling with her daughter, take a step back. Feel free to ask her in a quiet, de-stressed moment if she needs help in tantrum situations and what kind. But try to avoid asserting your vision onto her family, as right and well-meaning as it may feel. Your pure, basic, and nonjudgmental love is more valuable to her right now than you know.