By MIA FREEDMAN
When you have a baby, your relationship with your relatives changes.
Particularly the older female ones.
If you are lucky enough to have your mother and your partner’s mother in your life, they can be a huge source of support, comfort and reassurance.
Because those ladies? They’ve done this baby thing before. At least once each.
However it doesn’t always turn out like this.
Having spent many years comparing notes with girlfriends, it turns out I got incredibly lucky.
While many new mothers complain of older relatives insisting they KNOW how to do everything best (feeding, changing, settling etc, my Mum could barely remember having a baby.
She wasn’t even 100% on which way was up so she deferred to whatever I wanted to do and took to the role of my #1 cheerleader, boosting my non-existent confidence as a new mother. And my mother-in-law was just as supportive of whatever I wanted to do – even when it was plainly obvious that I hadn’t a clue.
But even though some things about babycare haven’t changed over the years since your own parents had kids, (they’re still best when held upright, not upside down) others HAVE.
A generation ago, mothers were encouraged to give babies bottles of sugar water. Or a nip of brandy in their milk to ‘help them sleep’. Babies were placed on their stomachs to sleep (with the view that this would stop them choking if they vomitted). And child restraints in cars were pretty much just stick-a-seatbelt-around-a-basket. Or hold the baby in the backseat. Hell, my mum was encouraged BY HER DOCTOR to smoke in the later stages of pregnancy so she wouldn’t gain weight.
Thanks to research, advice about how best to take care of babies is regularly evolving. For example, when I had my first child 15 years ago, you were told to introduce solids at 4 months. When I had my second child 7 years ago, it was 6 months. And by the time my third came along 4 years ago, it was back to 4 months.
When I was a baby, my Mum tells me you introduced solids at 6 weeks.
Here’s the lighter side of babycare Dos and Don’ts from Mattapps.com; some diagrams to show just how to handle a baby…
But on the serious side, it can be a source of extreme angst, conflict and frustration for many new parents who have to contend with bossy older relatives insisting they KNOW how to do something the right way and that they way you’re doing it is in fact wrong.
‘Well, that’s not how we did it in my day…’ is a common refrain. As if somehow, it’s these new-fangled ideas about how to bring up a baby safely and healthily are confected nonsense.
Via parenting author and editor of the Parenting Wellbeing site Jodi Benveniste:
Parent Wellbeing editor Jodi BenvenisteFamily and friends are often a trusted source of parenting info. They can provide practical and emotional support and offer relief, advice and reassurance.
But not always. I’ve heard many stories of mums feeling judged or criticised by their mothers or mother-in-laws. Parenting times have changed. Some would say for the better, and some would argue a return to the ‘good old days’ is far superior to the riff raff kids modern-day parents are raising. Regardless, there have been some changes…
1. Baby’s sleep
There are lots of different baby sleep methods, including Mia’s favourite The Gift of Sleep. But with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, guidelines about safe sleeping have changed. Instead of tucking baby into bed on their side or tummy with bunny rug, teddy bear and cot bumper, it’s now recommended that babies sleep on their back from birth without any extras in the cot. Since then, SIDS rates have decreased.
2. Baby’s food
A generation ago, bottle feeding was the norm. But then research into the value of breast milk has seen breastfeeding rates increase. As for introducing solids, when grandpa tries to feed hot chips to your 2 month old, that maybe because solids were once introduced much earlier. Now the recommended age is closer to 6 months.
3. Discipline
In previous generations, kids were raised to fear their parents, be seen not heard, and were the subject of rather stern discipline. Smacking and other forms of punishment, including the cane at school, were the norm. But these days, other approaches are seen as more effective at teaching our kids boundaries, appropriate behaviour, and life lessons.
4. Car safety
In earlier generations, babies were popped onto the back seat of the car in their bassinet. Yes, free floating in the back seat around every bend and over every bump! It’s unheard of, not to mention, illegal now. Instead, we get safety accredited capsules and car seats properly installed, not just for babies but for kids until they’re seven. Much, much safer.
There have been many other changes too. But some things have not changed:
5. Kids need love
The best thing we can offer our kids is our love, affection and attention. Kids thrive when they receive all three.
6. Raising kids is a learning experience
We don’t get it right every day. But we keep trying and we keep learning.
7. There’s no one right way to raise kids
You can create a parenting approach that suits you and your family. That involves understanding what’s important to you, learning a bit about how children develop so you’ve got realistic expectations of your child’s behaviour, and filtering all the advice. By all means, try the techniques that worked for your mum, but don’t feel like you’ve got to take on everything just because ‘it worked in their day’. Find your way.
Jodie Benveniste is a psychologist, parenting author, and the director of Parent Wellbeing. Her book and program, The Parent Manifesto, help parents create their own parenting approach. You can read more here.
If you have kids, have you ever experienced a change in parenting advice? Has it ever caused conflict? How did you deal?
Top Comments
Hmmm I guess I'm lucky. My MIL has never said anything to me about how I look after my daughter, yet. She's just happy to spend tme with her, walking throught the garden or reading her stories. My mum on the other hand seems to have beeen traumatised by the crazy way by birth went down, so spent a lot of time while I was pregnant studying up on birth and parenting so that I didn't have the same experience. She's full of all this informati\on about the recommended way to do things now. At least she's up to date. She's never said anything about how I'm raising my daughter, but that might be because I'm doing it the way she would anyway, just by coincidence.
Wow, this scares the bejeebus out of me. As a newish grandparent I already feel like I am tiptoeing around my DIL trying so hard not to offend.
I will ask or suggest something if I think it might be helpful but most of the time I am just saying I can't remember what I did (I can). DIL does a wonderful job as a brand new mum and is relaxed and coping really well, so am most likely just feeling a bit redundant.
I am so careful to ask how she likes to do something or handle something etc and am still feeling gutted from when I got gently but firmly chided for doing something "wrong". (it was something I couldn't in a million years have anticipated she wouldn't have wanted me to do I must add)
It makes me sad to read so many mothers speaking so dismissively of their mothers and MIL. Just because it's not in the Baby Book or doesn't have a reference to a peer reviewed scientific paper doesn't mean it's rubbish or an old wives tale.
My Mum's the same, ACW. She doesn't want to be the overbearing Mum/In-law either. I live with her with my daughter and she has even checked with me a number of times whether something is OK or not. More often than not I defer to her wisdom and experience anyway!
I think people are being horrible too and would probably be happier if they didn't dismiss everything their crazy old Mum/MIL suggested as being wrong. The best thing you can do is recognise you and the baby are new to this caper and you don't know everything, no matter how much you've read. I strongly believe this is helping with the escalation of PND - "I've read the books, I know what to do, but it's not working, I won't ask for help". Even here people think they know better than baby and maternal health professionals and dismiss them out of hand. Your loss, ladies.
I'm nervous too, about becoming a grandmother, just from reading comments here. While I think some people clearly are horses arses and insensitive to their children who are newish parents, some people are also over sensitive.
When my first born was first born, all I wanted from my mum and MIL was for them to say they thought I was doing a good job. After I knew that they thought I was (doing a good job) then I was a bit more willing to listen to their advice or comments. My MIL is very helpful and comes up to stay for long weekends everytime we need her, I am mostly happy to hear what she has to say, but she doesn't tell me how to do it, more has a conversation these days.
You sound like you're doing your best to be supportive - just be your DIL's cheer squad, give advice when asked and offer to babysit! My MIL is the exact opposite. Hyper-critical, rude and frequently tells me I am doing things the "wrong" way. I have two beautiful boys, 4 and 18 months and not once in all that time has she ever said "Good job". If I do anything differently to the way she did things - bearing in mind it has been 38 years since she last had a baby - she takes it as a deeply personal insult. It's very tiring having to explain "well, this is what the doctor/midwife/baby book/pharmacist etc recommends is done now". Thankfully my husband tells her to back off all the time!
So keep up the good work A Certain Wisdom, that DIL/MIL dynamic is a hard one to get right.