First, I should say that I am 100% guilty of all of these. I know this reads as an advice list, but really it’s advice I’m giving myself. The “you” I am addressing in this piece is me… unless it applies to you; then it is you.
I ran head first into this parenting thing, and have gladly and gratefully let it redefine me as a person. One unforeseen side-effect has been that I view everything through the lens of parenting. Sometimes that is a good thing. For instance, I don’t leave steak knives lying around as much as I used to. Sometimes, and this is what I’ve recently learned, it can alienate my non-kid having friends. Here are some things that are better left unsaid.
1. Dogs are not kids.
It usually goes like this. “Ugh. You know what really bugs me? When so and so compares her dog to my kid. Or when so and so refers to their dog as their kid. Dogs are not kids! She has NO IDEA!”
He finally started sleeping through the night!
You know what? Unless “so and so” needs professional help, I guarantee “so and so” knows that her dog is not a human child. She also knows that having a dog is nothing like having a kid. What she’s really saying is “Oh! Yes. I also have something in my life that poops AND brings me joy.”
She is trying to relate to you and be a part of your life – the life where all you do is talk about your kids. I know that it’s hard to relate when you have kids and your friends don’t. What were once close relationships can become sporadic meet-ups where you do your best to try to catch up with someone with whom you have very little in common anymore. Sure, you two were best buds in college, but now you have very different lives. So when “so and so” offhandedly, and perhaps awkwardly, tries to relate to your story about picking poo out of your bangs by comparing it to scraping dog shit out of the carpet, cut her some slack. She’s just trying to be nice. And she misses you.
Top Comments
good article, i probably do a lot of the annoying things non-parents do, i have a dog that i consider 'my baby' i was somewhat broody when i got her, but lacking all the things needed to have a child, or at least probably a good idea to have - such as a partner (not knocking single parents, just ruling out an immaculate conception), a house (i was living in a friends shed) and financial stability - i decided getting a dog was a better idea. of course i understand she's not a human baby, but she is the part of my life, other than my memories of childhood and playing with/babysitting friends kids, that helps me relate to parenthood. she is the closest thing i have to family and i do love her and care for her, i hope that my friends understand this.
as for the question of is a place child friendly, i think it's always worth asking (in any situation, not just parties) i have no problem with having kids around at my house, but it's very small and messy, to get in you basically have to climb over my bike and the rest isn't much better, my stairs are terribly steep and narrow, and the dog has the run of the place, so it isn't a great place for small kids, however welcome they might be. i always ask if it's ok to take my dog to someones house (yes comparison - don't shoot!) even though i can leave my dog tied in the yard or in a corner.
Loved this article, thanks John!