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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Finding some parents rather pretentious...

207 replies

Burgoo · 28/05/2022 16:54

I think its a minority though I have noticed over some time that there is a pattern where some parents almost seem a bit precious and pretentious about how much they do with their kids or what they give them.

I've seen a few instances where people say how they only feed their kids organic food, they have all these scheduled activities lined up, always available emotionally and present in the moment etc. Whilst that sounds great I do sometimes wonder whether it feels a bit of a "better parent" competition at times.

I feed my child whatever happens to be available in the house and I don't have the time to be messing around with carefully prepped meal plans and structured activities to occupy my child 24/7. Whilst I understand that those things are ideal, I often wonder why people feel the need to constantly bleat on about it, like it somehow makes them better parents (and as a by-product, better human beings). It feels like BS a lot of the time.

I've noticed that my partner and I often read online suggestions for things for/to do with/to feed our kid. There are meticulously arranged meal plans that sound absolutely ludicrous - avocado, mackerel, hummus, eggs and spinach muffins - I'd need a live in chef just to be able to get it all done. That's without the sheer amount of money these types of meal plans cost!

I don't begrudge people doing the best they can for their kids. It just comes off sanctimonious clap-trap when people bang on about it online.

My philosophy with kids is:

  1. Moderation, moderation, moderation... my kid eats anything from prawns and chicken to broccoli and curry (low-fat mind). She is a perfect weight, doesn't eat huge amounts of junk but we don't go on some mental plan for her
  2. Give your kid a bit of time to do nothing! I see so many parents having to be "doing" something with their kids all the time. Its a nice way to get your kids to avoid emotions and not be able to sit doing nothing for a while. I see it every day in my working life and I can see where it is going a mile off
  3. Stop hovering! My partner does this and it drives me mad. If my kid falls over, she can get up. She will learn its okay. Waiting for a catastrophe to happen isn't going to make a child feel anything but neurotic.
  4. Your kids are going to F up, alot! Don't put them on a pedestal; they will inevitably let you down and that is completely fine. We all do. I've seen so many parents who believe the sun shines out their kids rear ends.
  5. Follow through with a consequence and take off the punishment once the kid has done what s/he's told. Parents saying "if you don't do X we are going home" is the one that always gets me going. I want to say "no you aren't and you will regret it later!"

Sorry for the rant. Please don't anyone take this as a personal attack, its just an observation.

OP posts:
MilkyYay · 23/11/2022 12:22

Just let others do what they want.ignore, ignore ignore.

malificent7 · 23/11/2022 12:26

I agree op.

Honeynutcheerios · 23/11/2022 12:38

ChocolateHippo · 01/06/2022 15:56

You do you. I feed my child fish fingers, bribe them to behave with ice cream and chocolate and both my friend and I freely admit that we're probably completely failing at parenting. But our kids are still alive and kicking and seem OK (indeed, like 99.9% of other children). Most children will turn out OK whether given super-charged helicopter parenting, smug benignly neglectful 'free spirit' parenting or guilty "Let's just have the TV on for a bit, shall we?" haribo parenting (or a mixture of all of these). So I can't really get exercised about how other people parent their children, so long as they don't behave like the messiah of parenting, come to enlighten us all.

This. I think it’s all a balance/mixture but I do know someone who, when I asked if their toddler wanted some hungry caterpillar juice (which is 50-% water) literally GASPED in horror and went on and on about how they never give their child sugar etc. it pissed me off no end because of the degree of implied judgement and they are feckless in so many ways but now think it’s balanced by not giving their child juice. 😉

kittensinthekitchen · 23/11/2022 12:40

THIS THREAD IS SIX MONTHS OLD

Hungoverandashamed · 23/11/2022 13:09

I agree with you OP. I'm a parent and a teacher. The one thing everyone seems to be forgetting is that not enabling our kids to learn resilience or that actions have consequences is a massive failing.

Brefugee · 23/11/2022 13:11

For all those who are hard of thinking, I didn't say my way was "right". Its a view. I also acknowledged by faults as a parent but please do try again.

you are such a charmer, OP. How old are your DCs?

Brefugee · 23/11/2022 13:12

THIS THREAD IS SIX MONTHS OLD

IT DOESN'T MATTER

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