This post was originally published on Romper and has been re-published here with full permission.
No!” I yell. “How many times have I told you not to jump on my freaking bed?!”
My six year old stops bouncing.
“Sorry, mama,” he says. But he doesn’t move.
“Get off!” I scream. “Go make a bed fort or something! Go jump on your own bed!” Blaise bounces to the end of the bed and slides off.
I feel as if something cracks somewhere around my skull.
“DO NOT BOUNCE ON MY BED!” I scream, and he walks out.
From this exchange, you’d never know that I spent years breastfeeding, cuddling, and nurturing him. My kids are all attachment-parent babies, and as they get older, I’m struggling to attachment parent my growing kids. From the minute they were born, they were all breastfed, worn constantly, and never allowed to cry it out. My husband and I made sure their needs immediately met. They self-weaned, and my almost three-year-old son hasn’t stopped yet. They all still co-sleep: my four and six-year-old sons with my husband on one side of the enormous bed, the “baby” (who’s nearing three) with me on the other. My sons are all the textbook attached children. Martha Sears would be proud.
But now that they’re older, it’s been really hard for me to transfer the attachment-parenting principles to my growing boys. You can’t meet all their needs on demand, because sometimes, what they think are needs aren’t needs at all, like my two-and-half year old “needing” to play with every toy his brother has. And it’s much harder, for me, at least, to keep calm in the face of the storm. Screaming baby? No problem: the answer is to breastfeed. When they were smaller, the answer was always to breastfeed, or maybe to be wrapped up on my back and bounced. But now, the answers aren’t so simple.