The new parenting style everyone is jumping on.
When my Year 4 son recently came home from school upset and told me he got yelled at for forgetting a notebook, I was not surprised. I’d seen the notebook on the kitchen table.
But after years of schlepping cellos, books and lunches to school midday for my two sons, and leaving dinner prep on hold to take a kid to school as the sun was setting to retrieve homework, I finally made a decision to do no more rescues.
You’re on your own, kiddo: Not running to your child’s rescue every time she forgets her homework is good for kids, experts say. Bonus: It’s also good for parents’ sanity.
These "I forgot" extra school runs were making me frustrated and annoyed on a daily basis. And they weren’t teaching my kids not to forget their things. So I sat my Year 5 and Year 4 kids down before school started this year, and told them simply: I quit.
I quit the micro-job of being The Fixer: the one who solved all problems. From now on, I told them, if they left something at school in the afternoon, I wasn’t going to bring them back to school to get it. And if they left something at home in the morning, I wasn’t going to bring it to them.
As my boys enter the "double digits," I reasoned with myself, they’re ready to assume more responsibility for themselves — and that includes owning the consequences for their mistakes.
Sure, my kids would probably get reprimanded by teachers the first time they forgot their homework, or their string instruments. But it would also teach them the important lesson that there are real repercussions for mistakes. Did I waver a bit when I got that first phone call from school from my older son, asking me if I’d bring his cello? Sure: I heard the stress in his voice. But I just said calmly, “Just tell them you forgot.” I still felt bad when I hung up the phone, but I knew I’d done the right thing in the big picture.
Amy McCready author of "If I Have to Tell You One More Time," agrees, and says the "no rescue" policy is one of her cornerstones of nag-free mornings.