By LISA SADIKMAN
It is no secret that we parent each kid differently.
With my first one, I was on the floor during tummy time, running around to multiple Mommy & Me classes and diligently teaching her the Rules of Life: say please and thank you, share, don’t play ball in the house, don’t stick your finger in the fan, only one hour of screen time. My second one got the same drill, but without as much urgency, because it’s hard to enforce the “rules” when you’re fishing lipstick out of the 18-month-old’s mouth while your 4-year-old is screaming “I want Elmo now!”
My third girl is now 3, and I’ve finally learned that some things simply aren’t worth getting my panties in a bunch over. Here are a few things I let my third child do that I never would have allowed the first two to do at her age:
1. Ride a scooter in the house.
I used to get so annoyed when outdoor toys found their way indoors: sand buckets and pool noodles, hula hoops and soccer balls, the tricycle, the scooter. Now, I just take three deep breaths and look away. So what if the 3-year-old keeps crashing into the walls, leaving skid marks on the wood floors and dents in the floorboards? I have more important things than resale value to worry about, like trying not to burn dinner.
2. Use real scissors.
I know it’s not exactly safe, and we do have a pair of those crappy, blunt-tipped kid-friendly scissors, but the 3-year-old refuses to use them because she wants to be just like her big sisters. I don’t tell her no because I can’t deal with the yelling. (I get enough of that from my 12-year-old.) Meanwhile, the joke is on me because I have to stop obsessively checking Twitter and supervise if she’s going to use grown-up scissors, right? At least this gives me the opportunity to teach her how to be safe around sharp objects, like the Leatherman Multi-Tool, my beloved pruning shears and the X-Acto knife in the junk drawer.