By JO CASE
When I was thirty years old, the first of my friends became pregnant. My son was seven. At last, I thought.
The other mothers in my son’s schoolyard mostly left me alone: I was different. They had mortgages and talked about renovations; they swapped recipes and tips for avoiding traffic. I rented my house, didn’t enjoy cooking, and rode my bicycle everywhere (because I didn’t have a driver’s license).
I longed for a friend I could talk to about the foreign land of motherhood, from the inside.
My pregnant friend had been my manager when we both worked at a city bookshop. Since then, she’d moved into publishing. She was hard-working and ambitious; that person who was always the first to arrive at (and last to leave) the office, who talked about work over drinks and on weekends.
My first clue that we would not, after all, be companions in motherhood came when she showed me the room she had prepared for the baby. There was a carefully stocked bookshelf, bursting with children’s classics. (So far, so familiar.) The room was colour-schemed and decorated with lovingly sewn cushions and appliquéd lamp covers. A cupboard was stacked with cunning little hipster clothes, ordered by colour and artfully arranged, as if for a photo shoot.
“Wow.”
“I know it’s silly,” she said, her pride dissolving into embarrassment. “I’m sure it’ll be a mess once the baby arrives.”
Top Comments
"I taught my son to read before kindergarten". Doesn't sound to me like you have let the mummy wars go at all. Why feel the need to say this? These are the exact comments that fule mummy wars. Most of us just get on with it. You are the type of mum who creates these mummy wars, the kind of mum I try to stay away from while I quietly go about my own thing.
I don't think that the author meant that in a condescending way at all, Sameold.
Whilst she was listing the ways in which her friend was managing what seemed like the perfect motherhood, it was good to see her listing some of the great things that she had done with her child too.
Is it now impossible for mothers to be proud of their achievements without inciting Mummy hatred? She wasn't bragging, she was simply pointing out that whilst she doesn't fancy herself much of a housekeeper, she has managed some really great things with her son in other areas.
As the author pointed out, it was her sense of inferiority that had her snarking about her friend when she saw how well everything was going. If you took offense to this sentence, maybe look inside and find out why you did?
Good on you for quietly going about your own thing but there's nothing wrong with being proud of the things you and your kids achieve either.
I agree with Sameold. It does seem a bit smug. Perhaps not intended that way but that's how it reads.
P.S. Incase anyone's planning to suggest it, I don't need to "look inside" myself- certainly not jealous or feeling inferior! My just turned-two year old knows most letters and is already reading simple words. (But, he can't ride a bike! Not even a scoot-yourself-along-with-your-feet one!! So had she written about bike riding, well...) It's my opinion that this article just seems a bit wrong- can't put my finger on it but it seems to have a smug tone and a bit of a cliched fairytale feel, a kind of 'we may have been poor but by golly my boy is not dumb!' 'it's amazing what you can do with a toilet roll and a piece of string' tone. It positions the author as being 'above all that nonsense' when in reality she is bragging just a bit. Just not my cup of tea, that's all.
And this will be the sort of child who will make the first year of school hell for the other kids because he already knows what they are learning so misbehaves because he's bored.
I think it's a bit nasty to assume that her son will misbehave in kindergarten! Lots of kids can read a bit before they go to school and teachers are quite adept at dealing with different abilities in the class. The child will be moved up in reading levels accordingly and given extra reading if need be. I think you've just proved the mummy wars theory!
I am happy to admit that I DO make judgements about other people as parents- but generally only in situations that directly impact upon me or my children. I couldn't care less re: breast or bottle feeing, day care or stay-at-home- I respect people do what they need to do. What I don't respect is parents who don't provide behavioral guidelines. I know a couple of families whose children bullied mine in social situations. The children spoke to their parents in the most disrespectful manner (and they were not teenagers at the time) and outright bullied them, really. They behaved like Verucca Salt- refused to share, were rude and completely disrespectful to adults.I discontinued the friendship with these families because of the impact of their children's behaviour on my children. Do I judge them as parents? Yes- because their children were vile and horrible to others and this did not appear to disturb the parents in the least. When I wipe blood off my child's arm (where they whipped him with a tree branch), and deal with his subsequent anxieties (although the parents knew exactly what had happened, not one child was made to apologise)- you'd better believe I judge the parents.
It is important to be respectful of other's decisions, and there are many ways to raise a child successfully- but some people seem to have very little idea of how to actually parent- and that it involves more than buying them top of the range iPhones, lap tops and allowing them to behave exactly as they want at all times.