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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to tell my kids the truth instead of lying ?

29 replies

noitwasntme · 14/05/2010 20:52

My kids are very young, but I dont read them stupid romantic love stories like Cinderella, at night becuase I know its false and most of the time Cinderella does not live happily ever after,im not bitter im in a relationship for 20years not married but happy anyway.
I will grow with my children and tell them the truth about life,sex and relationships and still set boundries because I feel that is very important in life,im not claming Im perfect im not we all have problems and live and love is never easy, I know i will have problems thats life but how much do you protect your children really?.
Like most mums I want my children to be happy,but not fill them with stupid nonsence that they aspire to be these days like I want to be Cheryl Cole ,Jordan etc.
How about being you and being proud of who you are and achieving your dreams and ambitions not having a dream that requires a man to give us the happy ending?. Im not saying dont find someone, im just saying have your own dreams as well ,aibu Im waiting to be told im am.

OP posts:
Gigantaur · 14/05/2010 20:55

How old are yoru children? Im guessing they are very young.

Most of the traditional fairy tales have good messages in them.

YABu to refuse to read them to your children. they are simply stories, same as horrid henry/Enid Blighton/Roal Dahl etc.

JustMyTwoPenceWorth · 14/05/2010 20:56

I think that 'magic' is a very important part of childhood and, just my opinion, it's a bit mean to want to deny them that. They've got a whole adulthood for the realities of life. Let them have santa and the tooth fairy and cinders and fairness and goodness and happy ever after, just for a short while.

WinkyWinkola · 14/05/2010 20:57

It's part of life to let them work it out for themselves.

I personally add a twist the the 'prince rescued me' stories and make it into the female protag chose them.

But I had all those stories and still never wanted or believed in a man rescuing me. And that the sh*t doesn't hit the fan.

Your kids are exposed to real life much more than they are these stories....

KickArseQueen · 14/05/2010 20:59

and If you don't have a dream theres no chance of it coming true....

Sassybeast · 14/05/2010 21:00

Damn - that's where I've been going wrong all these years. Yunno I've ALWAYS thought Cinders was real and now I'll have to stop sitting around waiting for Prince Charming to come and sweep me off my feet

What do you read them instead of fairy tales ? Presumably you stick to non fiction given that the gruffalo and stuff aren't real ?

blinks · 14/05/2010 21:06

YABsooooooooooooooooooooooooogoddamU.

moominmarvellous · 14/05/2010 21:06

Fairytale girls have their problems too; being trapped in towers/injured/kicked out of home/kept as slaves/poisoned - it's not all rosy

They overcome all these problems, and make valuable friendships with mice and squirrels before they meet the prince.

I think fairytales do teach children about life, in a way they can understand in and age appropriate format.

You can always change the end so Cinderella gets a massive promotion rather than Prince Charming?

MaureenMLove · 14/05/2010 21:07

When they are very little, is not the time to be worrying about lasting impressions fgs!

DD loved all the usual stories about love and happy ever after. It's wrong to not let them enjoy them imho!

OrmRenewed · 14/05/2010 21:08

How old are your children OP?

larks35 · 14/05/2010 21:09

my DS is very young(16mo) and I don't actually read anything to him at this time. We have great fun with books (pointing, making noises, ripping turning pages etc.) I'm looking forward to reading fairy tales, whats wrong with Chicken Licking, 3 Little Pigs, Gingerbread Man and other Grimm tales? They're usually quite grisley and always engaged my imagination when I was small. Cinderella ain't the only fairy tale in town FGS! Don't deny your little ones a good ol' slightly scarey Grimm tale!

expatinscotland · 14/05/2010 21:10

YABU.

Very much so.

PixieOnaLeaf · 14/05/2010 21:10

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Monty100 · 14/05/2010 21:12
Biscuit
PrettyCandles · 14/05/2010 21:13

YABU. Idealistic, but YABU.

Even if you lived in a bubble on a deserted island you would not be able to insulate your dc from fantasy. Will you critcise every outside influence which is fantastical or sexist? Will you squash their flights of fancy?

Or will you present a ballanced counter view? Help them to develope and use their imaginations, help them to know what to believe and what to trust?

Ivykaty44 · 14/05/2010 21:14

of you go and write a story of woe and fear, thats best to prepare them for life

noitwasntme · 14/05/2010 21:15

I have no problem with Enid Blyton the Faraway Tree,Tooth Fairy, Santa etc.
I just think Cinderalla awating for Prince charming is lame, anyone can have a size 6 anyone could of fitted into the glass slipper and prince charming does not make happy ever after,not all stepmothers are bad ,some are very good in real life . What does that say?.

Beauty and the Beast she sacrificed her love for her father for a man or Beast she did not know now and loved him for who is really was, thats real love.

Bella in Twilight pathetic,lost without a man who was abusive and this is not what I want my dd to aspire to, this is surely not what life is about?.

OP posts:
LunaticFringe · 14/05/2010 21:20

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noitwasntme · 14/05/2010 21:21

Im not telling anyone your a bad parent, all Im saying is should i add some truth to it like they kived happily and she went onto work and still had what she desired.

OP posts:
TheHeathenOfSuburbia · 14/05/2010 21:22

Beauty and the beast always annoyed me as a child; the bloody moral of the story is don't judge by appearances...but the only point of Beauty is her looks.
So the actual moral is, only men can get away with being ugly. This may indeed be true, but is not good to have rubbed in when you're a more than averagely unattractive girl.

charmander · 14/05/2010 21:26

Well lots of Enid Blyton is very sexist so I would avoid that like the plague if you are worried about Cinderella.

noitwasntme · 14/05/2010 21:26

Winkywinkla im agreeing with you because I add my own twist . Im not slating anyone else, I just dont always agree with the endings thats all and dont mean to offend or upset anyone.

OP posts:
AMumInScotland · 14/05/2010 21:30

I think the important thing is not to just read your children stories where a passive girl waits for a man to fix her life for her. But if you pick a wide variety of books and stories for your children, it doesn't matter if one or two of them have that message. Books are like food in that respect - it's not that some foods are good and some are bad, you need a healthy varied diet with all things in moderation!

LunaticFringe · 14/05/2010 21:32

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Dancergirl · 14/05/2010 21:38

YABU

Fairy tales are fairy tales. Escapism. If children are read fairy tales it doesn't mean they will believe them and think life is all about happy ever after. They've got years ahead to work that out. I completely agree with justmytwopenceworth - childhood should be filled with magic and escapism. My children read fairy stories, sexist Enid Blyton and even, shock horror, original Noddy books with golliwogs in them. They're not to end up as adults with a rose-tinted view on life, nor are they going to grow up to be racist or sexist because of how we bring them up.

It's like saying girls shouldn't play with barbies or sindy dolls because they'll get a distorted view of how women's bodies should look like. Little girls don't think like that - they're JUST DOLLS! They're far more influenced by their mother's attitude to body shape, diet and exercise than a few dolls.

Just of of interest, do YOU never read fantasy books or watch rom-com films?

JaneS · 14/05/2010 21:39

YABU to be so naive/literal about fairy tales.