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I’m not an “old school”, traditional mum in most ways.
When I say that, I’m not trying to impress you with, “I’m not a regular mum, I’m a cool mum,” (even though that’s exactly what I am). But what I mean is, I let some things that I know are important to other parents slide.
I swear too much, and let my eleven-year-old son do the same, at home. I co-parent, not with his actual father, but with Stan (yes, I mean the streaming service). My kid’s diet is nutritionally balanced by Uber Eats. I let him watch stuff like Breaking Bad (it’s educational, right? I’m a pragmatic parent).
It’s not that I’m necessarily proud of these things; it’s that I’m not ashamed of them. Not in the slightest. I see it like this: I make concessions and pick my battles. As all mums know, that’s the key to making it out of this parenting gig with your sanity (somewhat) intact.
But there’s one area where I won’t compromise my standards: manners. Proper, bona fide, old school manners. Not BS etiquette like no elbows on the table. But manners in terms of how my kid treats other people. Basically, it’s important to me that he doesn’t turn out to be an a**hole.
I know a lot of people won’t agree with me about this. I know some parents who, for example, don’t believe in forcing manners on their kids – such as asking them to tell someone they’re sorry, even if they’re not, or even if they don’t fully understand why.
But I call BS on that, too. Because apologising is about respect for someone else’s feelings, and it’s something that’s very difficult to learn as an adult. I can’t stand people who aren’t comfortable enough with themselves to say “I f*cked up, I’m sorry”, or “I didn’t mean to f*ck up, I’m sorry.”
The adults I know who can’t take responsibility, who don’t think they’re ever wrong – they’re the worst and unhappiest people I know. I don’t want that for my kid. So here are the manners I’ve felt are really important to teach him: