By KATE HUNTER
Once the ante-natal classes are done and the fancy schmancy pram has been ordered, I believe all first-time parents should be sat down – forcibly if necessary – and made to watch ‘Finding Nemo’.
Not just because it’s a great movie, and not because it’s important to watch kids’ movies before your child sees them (this jury’s out on that one) but because it’s loaded with brilliant advice for parents and it’s heaps more fun than ploughing through a Steve Biddulph book, highlighter in hand.
Who’d have thought an uptight clownfish would demonstrate everything that’s wrong with helicopter parenting? Nemo’s dad Marlin is the piscatorial poster-boy for helicopter parents. But even learns that hovering does no one any good, and backing his kid is invariably a better option.
I think of Nemo often when it comes to raising my kids, and I’ve compiled a handy list of dilemmas that come up in modern family life and how they can be solved by selective reference to Finding Nemo.
1. “How can I let Imogen go on an excursion without me going too? She says she’s fine but what if she walks more slowly than the others and gets left behind?”
Wouldn’t you know it? This exact thing happened in the movie! Nemo has a ‘gimpy fin’ and tires easily, so Marlin tagged along on a school trip to the edge of the reef. Nemo was embarrassed to see his dad there and swam into deep water. The consequences were dire. If only Marlin had taken himself for a coffee or even gone to work, NOTHING would have happened. There would have been no story, but Nemo would have been safe. Telling a kid they’re physically unable to do something is DARING them to do it. And dares are fun.