The helicopter parent is
taking ever-heavier fire. American mothers and fathers, at
once too involved in their children’s development and too
lenient in dispensing discipline, stand accused of creating
some of “the most indulged young people in the history of
the world,” as Elizabeth Kolbert put it in The New Yorker
earlier this month. Resources for Infant Educarers (RIE), a
burgeoning hands-off parenting movement with
California
roots and classes at two
Manhattan
locations, offers a kind of
corrective therapy. Here, five things I learned not to do in
my underparenting course:
1. Underestimate my
daughter’s ability to sit still when she’s got a banana
in her sights. RIE
classes consist largely of uninterrupted, self-directed play
for the children and anxious onlooking by their parents.
Instructors often conclude sessions by serving the children a
snack of banana and water, requiring them to sit still on the
floor (unrestrained!) before getting their share. As my
daughter spends most of her meals climbing in and out of her
high chair, smearing her chicken nuggets all over my clothing,
I’m shocked to see her wait her turn while two other kids
get their food ahead of her.
2. Tell my daughter to
share the plastic hair curler that a little boy is trying to
take from her and to which she is now clinging maniacally.
RIE calls for letting kids resolve their own disputes (barring
physical violence). “If every time adults jump in and bring
in their version of what is right, the children learn either
to depend on them or defy them,” writes RIE founder Magda
Gerber. While I sometimes worry my daughter will grow to be a
selfish, friendless 5-year-old, it’s a relief to skip
explaining the concept of sharing to a baffled toddler. At
least during the classes—out in the world, I get dirty
looks from parents for ignoring such a widely held social
norm.
3. Rush to comfort my
daughter when an older child pushes a plastic milk crate into
her face. RIE
advises parents to give their kids a moment to recover on
their own before swooping in with kisses and cuddles. It also
discourages parents from saying “You’re okay” or
distracting children from their pain—my preferred technique
is to grab a shiny toy and jiggle it in front of her—lest
they learn that experiencing emotions is a bad thing.
4. Let my daughter use me
as a jungle gym, even though she really, really wants to. The RIE approach to discipline is simple: Set reasonable, consistent
rules and stick to them even if they’re unpopular with those
expected to abide by them. “It is not the best thing to try
to keep your children happy all the time,” writes Gerber.
“That is not the way life is.”
5. Rescue my daughter
from a stair-climbing toy when she realizes that crawling down
the stairs is harder than crawling up them.
RIE teaches that giving children the chance to solve their own
problems makes them feel confident and competent. (Gerber:
“The more often we have mastered a minute difficulty, the
more capable we feel the next time.”) It’s both tedious
and scary to watch my daughter attempt fifteen different
methods of descent from the contraption she is now sitting
precariously atop, but an RIE associate cuts me off when I
reflexively move to intervene. My daughter, for her part,
looks awfully proud of herself when she finally finds her own
way down.
--
Dwyer Gunn
,
New York
Magazine
|