This past year, we celebrated our daughter’s fifth birthday. From a delicate blob of flesh to an attitude-giving, cart-wheeling kindergartener - she’s been simultaneously testing my patience and expanding my capacity to love for half a decade.
We keep her birthdays very simple. We usually have it at my parents' house and all her cousins will come over for pizza, sushi and ice cream cake. No clowns, magicians, or bouncy castles. That’s it. Kids tend to find ways to entertain themselves when given the time, space and opportunity.
And every year when we arrive, my mum and I will have the same conversation. She’ll glance at my daughter’s outfit and ask, "So what is she changing into for her birthday?"
Watch: The two types of parents while shopping. Post continues after video.
I’ll respond flatly, "She’s not changing into anything. She chose to wear this and that’s what she’s wearing."
She’ll shake her head, give a disapproving look and her typical passive-aggressive comment, "I guess if that’s what she likes. I just thought most birthday girls would want to wear a dress. It’s a special time to celebrate, so it’s nice to dress up for the occasion. But of course, I understand how parents want to give their kids freedom nowadays."