by KATE HUNTER
‘All I want is for him to be happy,’ I cooed when my first baby was born. I probably followed it up with, ‘I want only the best for him.’
And maybe, in the fog of new-baby euphoria, combined with a lack of sleep, I might have even said, ‘Nothing is too good for this little man.’
Now, I say bollocks to that. Except for the first one.
More than anything, I want my kids to be happy, but I’ve realised wanting the best for them and treating them like royalty are not pathways to happiness. They are pathways to bratty kids and parental misery.
I’ve embraced the ‘second best’ school of parenting. Actually, I may have invented it – or given it a name, at least. It’s a school that’s easy to get into, impossible to be expelled from and attracts a crowd that’s heaps more fun than the ‘only the best‘ sister-school up the road.
I see, ‘only the best,’ parents all the time. Some of them are good friends. Problem is, I never get to talk to them properly because they’re too busy going to school open days or racing from gymnastics to guitar lessons to get together for coffee.
I say, ‘Why don’t you send Genevieve to the gymnastics centre in Kelvin Grove?’ and my friend Jen will reply, ‘I would, but the one at Cleveland is so much better. The head coach was at the Institute.’
It’s on the tip of my tongue to tell my friend she belongs in an institute, but I don’t. It’s none of my business (although it is, because I miss her and I’d like to have a proper conversation before we’re ninety) and I’m not the one driving a 40km round trip for a nine year old’s gymnastics class.
Top Comments
We decided before we had kids that IF we had kids, I'd stay at home to look after them because both my parents worked, and I missed them. This means we're pretty poor quite frankly! Our holidays consist of zoos, local beaches, museums, parks, playgrounds and free activities at shopping centres. The kids hear about their mates heading interstate and o/s, but we figure they'll be OK in the long run. I never had holidays with my father, he worked all through the school hols, at least our kids spend some of their holidays with their parents, even if it's not in Paris or Disneyland.
We went to Melb Aquarium yesterday and I was shocked to see very young children (as young and younger than our three) carrying around their own ipads/iphones or whatever they're called taking photos or playing games. I did wonder if we were letting our kids down because we have a laptop at home that we share (though the kids don't get access all that often) - the whole family, and their parents have iphones that the kids generally don't get to use. This article is a reminder that our kids should survive this electronic deprivation!
60mins just did story on this last week ( march 2013) do not start him at 4 1/2. Wait the extra time. You will have no regrets. But start him at 41/2 and u will risk it. U may think he is a smarty pants and so social to boot. But when he is in class with children a whole 10months older and 2 yearsolder if it is a composite class you will see that he is too young and you will wonder why you pushed him to start. It willbe tough knowing that he could be at school instead of home but it will be of benefit in the long run.