by BERN MORLEY
We’ve all done it. Told a few white lies to our children or made a few empty threats to get our children to behave.
And I’m not talking about the fabrication of Santa and his band of deceptive cohorts – no those are your stock standard childhood fallacies told to children to improve their lives. I’m talking more about the ones you invent to help you, the parent, do your job.
We didn’t own a car as kids so the best my mother could threaten me with was that she’d have the Bus Driver pull over and throw me off the bus. Which of course she never did, she was the empty threat queen.
I on the hand, have used the “Would you like to walk home?” method of discipline many a time. I’ve of course, never ACTUALLY followed through on it but I have heard of parents that do. The other day there was a situation between my boys in the back seat of the car because the 10 year old was looking out the 6 year old’s window. Yes, you read that correctly.
They argued back and forth progressively getting louder and more ridiculous with each exchange until I slammed on the brakes (adds a certain dramatic flair I find) and asked them if they’d “Like to get out and walk home??” Sam, the eldest shook his head gravely and said that no, he’d like to continue on in the car thanks. That’s when I heard Jack, the 6 year old say “Can you pull over at the next servo then?”
As my 10 year old so eloquently put it – “I think you just got owned by a 6 year old Mum.”
I think though the biggest lie I swallowed as a kid (please see what I did there) was to believe I’d grow a watermelon out of my BEHIND if I ate the seeds. I mean really Mum?
Out of my ears wasn’t a terrifying enough prospect for me? So too bubble-gum. Apparently if I swallowed this, I’d forever blow gum bubbles out of my arse. Sure, she fooled me into never EVER doing either of these two things but at what cost?
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I can honestly say I've never lied to my kids. Sure, I tell my two-year-old that his scribbles are great, but that's because they are great for a two-year-old. I'm not expecting Van Gogh standard. But I've never told either of them an out-and-out lie. I don't pretend that Santa and the Easter Bunny exist, because I remember the absolute devastation I felt as a child when I found out they weren't real, and I never want my kids to go through that. They both absolutely love Christmas and Easter anyway. I never tell them a lie to get them to do something - I just give them the real reason they need to do it (I'm not claiming this method works). I answer all of their questions honestly - but only with as much detail as is necessary for their age. We've talked about death and tampons and everything in between. It can be a bit of a challenge, but it's worth it.
We used to drive past a school on the way out of town to go to Melbourne, and Mum always told us that it was an orphanage where naughty children were sent because their parents couldn't tolerate them any more, and if we were naughty on the trip we'd be dropped off there and not taken home!! There was one day there we were both being terrors, and mum actually packed a bag of clothes for each of us, put us in the car and started driving to "take us to the orphanage" for being naughty!! We were perfectly behaved for probably a year after that one!