My daughter just stands in the shower, and stares at the taps.
“How do I turn this on?” she asks me.
We’re travelling. In a strange bathroom. The shower isn’t the same as at home. She’s stumped.
“Just twiddle some stuff, babe!” I shout from the other room, where I’m picking up the pyjamas she left on the floor five minutes ago, and finding her some clean pants at the bottom of the suitcase, and laying out a clean T-shirt for her. “Figure it out!”
“But… I don’t know how to do it!” My daughter’s voice is rising. Impatience, frustration. Pause. “It won’t…. work!”
My daughter is nine. She is fit and strong, smart and funny and empathetic.
I do too much for you, I think, as I sigh and move towards the bathroom.
I think it again at breakfast when I butter and slice her toast for her. I think it as I dig out her hat and her sunscreen and her notebook and her favourite pens and I make sure it’s all in her bag.
I do too much for you.
John Marsden would almost certainly agree. This week everyone is talking about the manifesto that the teacher, principal and creator of the Tomorrow… series of YA novels has published about modern parenting. It’s called The Art Of Growing Up and the topline is that in his wide experience, there is an entire generation of children that has been cosseted and protected and love-love-loved so damn much that they are incapable of facing the real world and its challenges.