Before I actually became a parent, I held some delusion that I would be in control of the then-hypothetical children who would someday grow up under my roof.
I think that delusion is perpetuated among the not-yet-parents community by people who blame parents for their kids’ behaviour in public. But every parent knows that children save their most mortifying, abhorrant, crazy-ass tantrums and MTV-worthy behaviour for public spaces and moments when their parents will be caught completely off-guard and vulnerable to it.
Why waste a good tantrum on the quiet walls of home when the check-out line at Target has such a great built-in audience? Why take the vocal chords out for a joyride for your own empty family room when you can regale every single person at a restaurant with your cinematic screams — but only after the meal order has been placed and before the food actually arrives? Children are brilliant, I tell you, and their genius is evil.
Eleven years into this parenting gig, I’ve learned that there are several areas in which I have zero control over my children, no matter what I or the child-free strangers on the street, in the airplane, or at Target believe. I’ve also learned that the sooner I understand and accept that I hold no dominion over these areas in my children’s lives, we will all be happier. I don’t often offer parenting advice because I’m no expert and I firmly believe that every child is different. But in the interest of saving someone else the pain, time, and energy, I present to you Three (Maybe Four) Battles Not to Pick with Your Children — for your own mental health, if nothing else:
1. What and how much they eat
You are definitely charged with offering your children healthy, balanced meals and with meting out less nutritious fare judiciously. That is never in question.
But be aware that it is your child that will always determine if he or she will eat the meal you offer. You can’t force someone — anyone, really — to eat without extensive medical help. You can cajole, coax, threaten, and bribe, but you cannot make that child ingest that quinoa if he doesn’t want to do it. And here’s the bottom line: you don’t want to, because you don’t want to make food a warzone for a child.