Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That seems silly. As a kid, I would have wanted the parents who let me eat candy all day, stay up as late as I wanted and never stop watching TV.
That's a really short-sighted and simplistic way to look at it. She's not saying would you be 100% fun for the kid in every moment, she's asking whether, over the course of their lives, would they be glad they had you as parents. Can you provide love, support, boundaries, compassion and kindness? Can you suffer through stuff that's boring to you because it's important to your kids? Can you sacrifice some of your wants in favor of their needs? Typically when she gives this advice, it's to someone who is on the fence about whether to have kids at all, and who has concerns about whether they can/want to make the necessary sacrifices. She's essentially asking them to be honest about what they can give to a child, and whether they think their hypothetical child would think that was enough some day.
Obviously. But she should say that instead of the silliness she did.
I'm sorry she gives her readers the benefit of the doubt that they have more emotional depth than a tree stump.
I love you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That seems silly. As a kid, I would have wanted the parents who let me eat candy all day, stay up as late as I wanted and never stop watching TV.
That's a really short-sighted and simplistic way to look at it. She's not saying would you be 100% fun for the kid in every moment, she's asking whether, over the course of their lives, would they be glad they had you as parents. Can you provide love, support, boundaries, compassion and kindness? Can you suffer through stuff that's boring to you because it's important to your kids? Can you sacrifice some of your wants in favor of their needs? Typically when she gives this advice, it's to someone who is on the fence about whether to have kids at all, and who has concerns about whether they can/want to make the necessary sacrifices. She's essentially asking them to be honest about what they can give to a child, and whether they think their hypothetical child would think that was enough some day.
Obviously. But she should say that instead of the silliness she did.
I'm sorry she gives her readers the benefit of the doubt that they have more emotional depth than a tree stump.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're TTC so no kids yet. But hell yeah I would want myself as a parent. DH and I are awesome, have lots of fun, would love to play games. I always came up with the best ideas in my group of friends and am great with unstructured activities. Even now DH and I have weekends where we just pack the car and drive until we hit something interesting to visit. I was a great nanny when I was younger.
That being said, the quiet, studious, shy kid probably wouldn't want me as a parent. Nor would the sporty kid, but DH is all about sports.
OP asked what you thought of the advice, not whether you think you're awesome
She's going to be insufferable as a parent, isn't she?
I sort of love that post. Nothing better than a person who isn't a parent talking about what a fantastic parent they will be. Bwaaahahahah!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're TTC so no kids yet. But hell yeah I would want myself as a parent. DH and I are awesome, have lots of fun, would love to play games. I always came up with the best ideas in my group of friends and am great with unstructured activities. Even now DH and I have weekends where we just pack the car and drive until we hit something interesting to visit. I was a great nanny when I was younger.
That being said, the quiet, studious, shy kid probably wouldn't want me as a parent. Nor would the sporty kid, but DH is all about sports.
OP asked what you thought of the advice, not whether you think you're awesome
She's going to be insufferable as a parent, isn't she?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're TTC so no kids yet. But hell yeah I would want myself as a parent. DH and I are awesome, have lots of fun, would love to play games. I always came up with the best ideas in my group of friends and am great with unstructured activities. Even now DH and I have weekends where we just pack the car and drive until we hit something interesting to visit. I was a great nanny when I was younger.
That being said, the quiet, studious, shy kid probably wouldn't want me as a parent. Nor would the sporty kid, but DH is all about sports.
OP asked what you thought of the advice, not whether you think you're awesome
She's going to be insufferable as a parent, isn't she?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That seems silly. As a kid, I would have wanted the parents who let me eat candy all day, stay up as late as I wanted and never stop watching TV.
That's a really short-sighted and simplistic way to look at it. She's not saying would you be 100% fun for the kid in every moment, she's asking whether, over the course of their lives, would they be glad they had you as parents. Can you provide love, support, boundaries, compassion and kindness? Can you suffer through stuff that's boring to you because it's important to your kids? Can you sacrifice some of your wants in favor of their needs? Typically when she gives this advice, it's to someone who is on the fence about whether to have kids at all, and who has concerns about whether they can/want to make the necessary sacrifices. She's essentially asking them to be honest about what they can give to a child, and whether they think their hypothetical child would think that was enough some day.
Obviously. But she should say that instead of the silliness she did.
The thing is that you get the kid you get. You might very well get the quiet, shy, or sporty kid. A good parent will be a good parent with the kid she gets, not the one she wishes she got.Anonymous wrote:We're TTC so no kids yet. But hell yeah I would want myself as a parent. DH and I are awesome, have lots of fun, would love to play games. I always came up with the best ideas in my group of friends and am great with unstructured activities. Even now DH and I have weekends where we just pack the car and drive until we hit something interesting to visit. I was a great nanny when I was younger.
That being said, the quiet, studious, shy kid probably wouldn't want me as a parent. Nor would the sporty kid, but DH is all about sports.