Jane says…
In the last few weeks, in response to various heinous mommy crimes I’ve committed, I have been the recipient of The Look. You know…The Look that is part raised eyebrow, part firm set of mouth, and part slight head tilt? The Look that says, “You are a bad parent.”
1) I let my elementary school aged son read all the Diary of A Wimpy Kid books. Apparently the books are so subversive that my 8 year old is now going to be forever corrupted. OR maybe it’s just superfantastic with me that the kid is reading of his own volition books that accurately depict the kind of frustration all kids feel because life seems arbitrary and out of their control. So either my kid is screwed from the word go because I don’t censor his reading or he’s learning to love reading for pleasure and is discovering one of the great joys of literature – learning about the universalities of the human condition. Besides, if he doesn’t get used to books about middle schoolers acting snotty, how’s he going to handle American Psycho, which I just ordered for him off Amazon?
2) Same kid: not in a booster seat. The law is 8 or 80 lbs. Neither of my kids is going to weigh 80 lbs. until college at the rate they’re going; they are skinny little buggers. Just like the knowledge of what the evolving power of a certain Pokemon may be or that the art teacher is actually a witch, the law governing when a kid is liberated from the confines of a car seat is popular playground conversation. That boy woke up the morning of his 8th birthday and the first words out of his mouth were, “I don’t have to sit in a car seat anymore!!!!” And I totally get that. It’s a rite of passage. Less significant than, say, a bar mitzvah or first misdemeanor arrest, but it counts. Anyway, I got the full-on Look for that one. As though I were riding around town on a Ducati with the kid balancing on the handlebars all the time because really in actuality I’ve only done that three or four times. Plus. If you’re reading this and you are over 22? Chances are you didn’t sit in a car seat for most of your childhood and yet, you seem to be fine.

3) My daughter eats one fruit or vegetable a day. And sometimes that “fruit” comes in the form of a roll up. “If you just serve it to her and don’t give her anything else until she eats it, eventually she’ll get hungry enough and then she’ll discover she likes it.” Nice try, Mommy Nazi. You know not whereof you speak. For one thing, my daughter would starve herself just to give you the metaphorical finger if you tried to make her eat anything she didn’t want to. For another thing, if you’d like to come live in my house during her adolescence after I’ve allowed my darling, perfectionist, control-freak, genius monkeychild to turn food into a battleground, be my guest. I’m picking my fights, and this isn’t one of them. Besides, she might only weigh 41 lbs, but dollars to donuts (because, hell, she’ll eat those – unless they have jelly in them because jelly is fruit-like) my 6 year old could hold her own in a fair fight with Dwayne the Rock Johnson. Girlfriend is fierce.
4) My husband and I went for a run and left them home alone. This one got me the full two eyebrows up and mouth formed into an “O” whilst air was sucked in audibly. That’s right. I left them home alone for half an hour. Oh. My. God. And when I think of all those times that child predators and violent rapist Jehovah’s Witnesses came to the house and tried to get in and maul my children only to be stopped by me at the door saying, “Sorry! Mommy’s here! Go away, please!” it’s a miracle they survived the experience. Get a grip, people, would you? They know the cell phone number (and for the love of god they called me three times in that half hour span mostly to bitch about the fact that they were fighting over the remote) and aren’t incapacitated or clueless enough not to get to the neighbors if they needed anything that very moment.
5) And speaking of cellphones…I dropped one of the anklebiters off for a playdate the other day and the mother came chasing after me as I backed out of the driveway, “Wait! Wait! I need your cellphone number in case of emergency! And you didn’t tell me if she had any food allergies!” It’s a miracle that the entire adult population in the world today made it past age 11. Our parents didn’t have cellphones, yet miraculously, adults responsible for our care when we were away from home managed to not kill us without the ability to reach out and touch someone. And the food allergy thing is getting out of control. If my kid had a fatal allergy to something, do you think I might have forgotten to mention it? Or even, that I might have taught my little sweetpea not to eat the DeathFood? I got a notice from kindergarten at this year telling me that a kid in the class was allergic to, I shit you not, snow peas and shitake mushrooms, so I shouldn’t send those things in for snack. Damn it! I was totally planning on sending in snowpea and shitake mushroom smoothies laced with vodka and Xanax for my daughter every day.
6) Next year, my third grade son and my first grade daughter will be walking home from school. On their own. I got The Look for this plan, too. Because do I not know?? Am I not aware??? Walking home from school with crosswalks, crossing guards, and the busiest of busybody neighbors and parents all around them is akin to shooting them each out of a cannon over shark infested waters. I walked to and from school, with the neighbor kids, starting in first grade. And every day after that until my parents finally tired of my shenanigans and sent me off to boarding school where god only knows I did far more dangerous stuff than cross the street without someone holding my hand.
Here’s what I do worry about: the stuff that is actually dangerous, like head injuries from not wearing a helmet while biking, not knowing how to swim, and trying to pull a strange dog’s tail. Children are no more in danger of abduction or predation now than they were 20 and 30 years ago. Violent crime in this country is on the decline. My daughter will not get scurvy. If my kid hurts herself or gets sick during a playdate, I’m sure that the adult supervising her will figure out that a phone call to information will reveal magical information like my home phone number or, barring that, a doctor’s phone number, or perish the thought, 911. If I don’t have faith that my kids can learn how to walk 1/3 mile in broad daylight down the sidewalk from school to home, how on earth do I expect them to learn the really important stuff, like not to mix liquor and beer. Oh lighten up…you know what I mean.