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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To cut and past this anti-competitive parenting post that somone posted on faceache

121 replies

LEMisdisappointed · 12/09/2013 20:06

Written by a Pre-School Teacher – It says it all!
I was on a parenting bulletin board recently and read a post by a mother who was worried that her 4 1/2 year old did not know enough. “What should a 4 year old know?” she asked.

Most of the answers left me not only saddened but pretty soundly annoyed. One mom posted a laundry list of all of the things her son knew. Counting to 100, planets, how to write his first and last name, and on and on. Others chimed in with how much more their children already knew, some who were only three. A few posted URL’s to lists of what each age should know. The fewest yet said that each child develops at his own pace and not to worry.

It bothered me greatly to see these mothers responding to a worried mom by adding to her concern, with lists of all the things their children could do that hers couldn’t. We are such a competitive culture that even our pre-schoolers have become trophies and bragging rights. Childhood shouldn’t be a race.

So here, I offer my list of what a 4 year old should know.
She should know that she is loved wholly and unconditionally, all of the time.
-He should know that he is safe and he should know how to keep himself safe in public, with others, and in varied situations. He should know that he can trust his instincts about people and that he never has to do something that doesn’t feel right, no matter who is asking. -He should know his personal rights and that his family will back them up.
She should know how to laugh, act silly, be goofy and use her imagination. She should know that it is always okay to paint the sky orange and give cats 6 legs.
-He should know his own interests and be encouraged to follow them. If he could care less about learning his numbers, his parents should realize he’ll learn them accidentally soon enough and let him immerse himself instead in rocket ships, drawing, dinosaurs or playing in the mud.
-She should know that the world is magical and that so is she. She should know that she’s wonderful, brilliant, creative, compassionate and marvellous.
-She should know that it’s just as worthy to spend the day outside making daisy chains, mud pies and fairy houses as it is to practice phonics. Scratch that– way more worthy.

But more important, here’s what parents need to know.
-That every child learns to walk, talk, read and do algebra at his own pace and that it will have no bearing on how well he walks, talks, reads or does algebra.
-That the single biggest predictor of high academic achievement and high ACT scores is reading to children. Not flash cards, not workbooks, not fancy preschools, not blinking toys or computers, but mom or dad taking the time every day or night (or both!) to sit and read them wonderful books.
-That being the smartest or most accomplished kid in class has never had any bearing on being the happiest. We are so caught up in trying to give our children “advantages” that we’re giving them lives as multi-tasked and stressful as ours. One of the biggest advantages we can give our children is a simple, carefree childhood.
-That our children deserve to be surrounded by books, nature, art supplies and the freedom to explore them. Most of us could get rid of 90% of our children’s toys and they wouldn’t be missed, but some things are important– building toys like lego and blocks, creative toys like all types of art materials (good stuff), musical instruments (real ones and multicultural ones), dress up clothes and books, books, books. (Incidentally, much of this can be picked up quite cheaply at thrift shops.) They need to have the freedom to explore with these things too– to play with scoops of dried beans in the high chair (supervised, of course), to knead bread and make messes, to use paint and play dough and glitter at the kitchen table while we make supper even though it gets everywhere, to have a spot in the yard where it’s absolutely fine to dig up all the grass and make a mud pit.
-That our children need more of us. We have become so good at saying that we need to take care of ourselves that some of us have used it as an excuse to have the rest of the world take care of our kids. Yes, we all need undisturbed baths, time with friends, sanity breaks and an occasional life outside of parenthood. But we live in a time when parenting magazines recommend trying to commit to 10 minutes a day with each child and scheduling one Saturday a month as family day. That’s not okay!

Our children don’t need Nintendos, computers, after school activities, ballet lessons, play groups and soccer practice nearly as much as they need US. They need fathers who sit and listen to their days, mothers who join in and make crafts with them, parents who take the time to read them stories and act like idiots with them. They need us to take walks with them and not mind the .1 MPH pace of a toddler on a spring night. They deserve to help us make supper even though it takes twice as long and makes it twice as much work. They deserve to know that they’re a priority for us and that we truly love to be with them.

OP posts:
IceBeing · 13/09/2013 14:47

yeah loving the gender biasing...boys should be able to spend time playing fairy houses too...and girls might even get into dinosaurs...weirder things have happened...

friday16 · 13/09/2013 14:49

TheUglyFuckling

You've missed out the side order of "I can afford to spend a lot of time with my children because my husband is rich and successful, whereas you're married to a loser who needs you to work in order to pay the bills".

Allegrogirl · 13/09/2013 14:50

Girls make mud pies (playing at cooking like 'mom'). Boys actually get to play in the mud. Lucky them.

YABU for sharing this bullshit.

ToysRLuv · 13/09/2013 14:53

Ormirian: The "heuristic" toy basket got me too. Grin It basically means lentil weaving, educational toys (not your average plastic crap with batteries we've got a basket of those )..

DuelingFanjo · 13/09/2013 14:54

I have read it before and I am surprised the OP doesn't like it.

TheUglyFuckling · 13/09/2013 14:54

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ToysRLuv · 13/09/2013 14:55

We have a garden, but DS doesn't like mud. He is doomed, isn't he?

Allegrogirl · 13/09/2013 14:57

'We have a garden, but DS doesn't like mud. He is doomed, isn't he?'

Yup. He'll fail his SATs and won't get into an Ivy League College now. Should've tried harder.

ToysRLuv · 13/09/2013 15:00

Shit.

ILivebytheRiver · 13/09/2013 15:04

Utter Guff

TheUglyFuckling · 13/09/2013 15:09

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ToysRLuv · 13/09/2013 15:14

Ok. But I doubt anyone will want him now.

TheUglyFuckling · 13/09/2013 15:24

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Mumraathenoisylion · 13/09/2013 15:29

I fucking hate arts and crafts.

I was asked by a school gate mum once 'do you do arts and crafts with dc1?' Wtf do you say to that????

TheUglyFuckling · 13/09/2013 15:35

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ballroomblitz · 13/09/2013 15:39

I've already read that anti-competitive reply on a friend's facebook. It was worthy of an eye-roll and the thought of 'well easy to say when you've only got the one under one'. Load of shite imho

TeaJunky · 13/09/2013 15:48

Haha Grin

No comment

hands out the Brew all round

TeaJunky · 13/09/2013 15:51

toddles off to to have undisturbed bath while dd has conviently gone to friends house for tea and other one is napping Grin

KatoPotato · 13/09/2013 15:55

Agree with wandymum I'm a bit Hmm that you're not allowed to be proud of your own child's achievements these days.

fromparistoberlin · 13/09/2013 16:08

agree its a self satisifed piece of wording

sorry but I wish people with STFU about parenting

"supervised beans" LOL

its a sll a bit steiner schoolish

and i have major working mother guilt this week cant you tell

fromparistoberlin · 13/09/2013 16:10

"But we live in a time when parenting magazines recommend trying to commit to 10 minutes a day with each child and scheduling one Saturday a month as family day. That’s not okay! "

oh fuck off and DIE, even I manage more time with my klids than that and I work FT!

bollox

TeaJunky · 13/09/2013 16:14

Btw, can someone kindly show me where the lentil waving basket was mentioned?

I've read the op twice and still can't find it Blush

(My parents obviously didn't read to me enough, tut)

ToysRLuv · 13/09/2013 16:16

It was in one of the replies, Tea.

TeaJunky · 13/09/2013 16:20

Aaaah ok, toy. Thanks Grin

MrsDeVere · 13/09/2013 16:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.