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SallyS's avatar

I think gentle parenting is largely a fucking scam. While the idea of making big emotions feel safe for kids is laudable, my kids never responded to the stupid scripts and I feel like it's basically another framework in which parents (mothers!) are encouraged to self abnegate for years on end. And no, Dr Becky's "you're a good mom having a hard time" affirmations don't make up for it. I feel like a heretic just for saying that because the vibe is so pervasive, but there it is.

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Ally's avatar

Thank you so much for this one!

I was a kid who had a birthday 2 days before the cut-off for my kindergarten class, and I was so clearly emotionally not-ready. My elementary school (a very artsy hippie-dippie public school) actually had what they called "Transitional" for kids just like me - kids who had completed kindergarten but would do better...not being in first grade yet. There were very few of us, but we mattered, and that mattered, because it was life-changing for me. I went from having a very difficult and fraught kindergarten year, to being one of those kids who standard school is just kind of "made for" in that I never struggled to meet expectations, I easily approached new material, etc.

So when my first kid - a summer baby - was very hesitant and clingy and emotionally young, I angsted a lot about kindergarten. Then covid hit and I was facing the choice of not only enrolling him in kindergarten, but enrolling him in VIRTUAL kindergarten; it was just such an easy hard no for me. I enrolled him instead in a hippie-dippie private school that managed to stay in-person by transitioning to 100% outdoor learning (in the northeast, so no easy feat). This school had the added benefit of mixed-age, no-official-grades learning, and basically it was the best thing ever for him so now we are stuck paying this tuition until he ages out of their program.

My younger kid - also a summer baby - is the exact opposite. He thrives on high external expectations, especially when they come from someone besides me. He wants to grow up faster, and he loves being given the chance to. He also attends the hippie-dippie private school, which - being progressive and expensive - accommodates all kinds of learning styles, so they meet him where he is in the same way they meet my older kid where he is. Still, when they recommended he move out of the preschool group and into the early elementary group right at 5, I hesitated. My experiences (mine and my first kid's) with "holding back" had been so overwhelmingly positive that I had a hard time trusting that it could be "as good" to move him forward on schedule. But we did it and guess what, he thrived.

So in the end I learned that being super dogmatic and rigid about there being "a best practice" or a right way - it just, yet again, doesn't work that way. Each kid is different. Which is exhausting but also freeing.

I was talking to the director of this hippie-dippie private school once about this very thing and he told me that with his older daughter, they were struggling with some basic behavior issues around age 5. And of course everything in his approach to education is this very progressive, emotionally comprehensive kind of vibe, but they talked to a child psychologist and at her urging tried out a sticker chart. And he was like, "Everything in me does not ideologically believe that the sticker chart is the best option - the external motivation! the quantification! etc! - but you know what? It made things so much happier. This kid responded best to a visual, external tracking mechanism and liked the motivation of the gold stars. And we have to follow what works best for the kid!" That really put me at ease, about the times where my own life clearly indicates that "the most gentle" or "the most progressive" or "the best" practice just does not work for us.

I rock climb with a group of other moms and one of my favorite things about it is how it really, truly teaches you that there is no right way up. No two people have the same body and no two people have the same journey up the wall. I am short and can't reach holds a tall person can, so I find different ways to get my ass up there. It isn't "cheating" if I do a million tiny moves for every one move a tall person makes, and it isn't lazy if a taller person just gorilla-reaches their way up. We are all just working with the body and mind we have, and there is no "fake" way up that wall. If you get up, you did it right for you. It really helps me ground myself to apply that lesson to other areas of my life.

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