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' Chronic overparenting'......is it something MNers recognize ?

393 replies

mozhe · 22/06/2007 13:17

...and by that I mean the persistent/long term/almost obsessive preoccupation with providing ' perfection' for their DCs....

Do you think this is something you are prone to ?

Is it more likely to occur in parents of first/only children ?

More likely in previously high achieving SAHMS ?

And what do you understand by the term ' benign neglect ' ?

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dinosaur · 22/06/2007 13:18

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mozhe · 22/06/2007 13:19

It is something I'm quite interested in....I was trying to explain it to a french colleague....don't think it quite happens in the same way in France ?
What are your thoughts Dino ?

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dinosaur · 22/06/2007 13:20

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Curmudgeonlett · 22/06/2007 13:21

Nope not prone to it ..

yes I would imagine it is more likely to occur in parents with only one child .. it equates to the PFB syndrome doen't it

I suppose I fit in with 'previously high achieving SAHMS' but am happy to say my children do not get perfection nor do they expect it

benign neglect .. hah .. didn't I coin that phrase on here

Speccy · 22/06/2007 13:22

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oranges · 22/06/2007 13:22

not sure I've met anyone who actually does this. It seems to be a phenomena created by the media. Most 'previously high achieving SAHMs' I met are relaxed and confident about parenting.

TootyFrooty · 22/06/2007 13:23

Never come across it.

Anna8888 · 22/06/2007 13:24

Over-parenting is to me the kind of parent that schedules every minute of a child's day with organised activities and doesn't leave any room for free play, vegging, child entertaining itself, unscheduled chat, just getting on with life etc.

I think it's a big thing in London and New York, judging by the friends I have in those cities. And it's also an issue for working mothers who are a bit anxious that their children aren't getting enough stimulation.

Most SAHMs I know are pretty relaxed and "hang out" with their children...

Curmudgeonlett · 22/06/2007 13:25

of course there's a lot of preconceptions hidden in the questions

after all the phrase 'previously high acheiving' when referring to SAHMs made me snort

dinosaur · 22/06/2007 13:25

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Anna8888 · 22/06/2007 13:29

I have one girlfriend here, in Neuilly, whose 5 and 6 year old daughters have all day school plus "improving" after school activities (ballet, violin, English, speech therapy, psychoanalyst) and playdates every day... her children aren't much fun, actually, as they don't have any imagination . That's "over-parenting" IMO because it's counter-productive.

zookeeper · 22/06/2007 13:29

lol Mohze - I have this insecapbale feeling that you're more at the "benign neglect" end of the spectrum.

So am I

We'd better duck now before the onslaught begins

zookeeper · 22/06/2007 13:29

inescapable

ViciousSquirrelSpotter · 22/06/2007 13:29

I think it's a meejah invention

filthymindedvixen · 22/06/2007 13:30

benign neglect here too..

dinosaur · 22/06/2007 13:30

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WaynettaSlob · 22/06/2007 13:31

But Anna - they may not seem like much fun to you, but perhaps they are happy, and surely that's they key?

zookeeper · 22/06/2007 13:31

Does the word "playdate" get your hackles up?

edam · 22/06/2007 13:34

pyschoanalysis?! Blimey.

Anna8888 · 22/06/2007 13:35

Waynetta - no, when I say they aren't much fun, I mean they whine and can't occupy themselves and they are a nightmare to have round - my daughter can't bear the earthquake like zone her bedroom becomes when they've been round. They aren't happy, nor is their mother (and she's a good friend and we talk about all these issues).

Marina · 22/06/2007 13:35

Me too dino. Alien concept in our part of London as well

dinosaur · 22/06/2007 13:35

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Anna8888 · 22/06/2007 13:36

edam - yes, I can't take the psychoanalysis thing that Parisians have either

yesmynameisigglepiggle · 22/06/2007 13:36

agree with Anna, fewer scheduled activities can mean better life skills. Ie children help around the home, learn to cook and tidy up after themselves, manage boredom etc. More importantly (and here I am advocating benign neglect) leaving them to play alone helps their brains develop properly, children learn to make sense of things themselves. All my children learn things for themselves, it makes them remember...if only I had the time to overparent them, ho hum

Marina · 22/06/2007 13:36

An article in Junior doth not a real life phenomenon make

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