Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. One friend worked really hard to cultivate it and now it’s a group of families who are truly always there for each other. We text each other throughout the week. Celebrate each others successes, cry together, watch each other kids; now that they’re older, the kids wander in and out of each others houses. The kids are very much like cousins and I have a group of women (and their husbands) that I know I can call on at any minute. I am very lucky but to my first point, it takes hard work to get there. You can do it too.
But, again, when they were younger and you were working who watched the kids?
Your premise is false because the aspects of the “village” that OP is asking about are benefits associated with a time when most women didn’t work outside the home. So, their village didn’t provide that kind of care either. Those of us who paid for early child care during the work day but have friends or family that we can rely heavily on do indeed have that level of support OP is asking about. And it is amazing and to Pp’s you just have to never move or let your friends move lol.
Your definition of a “village“ essentially means that everybody has one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. It’s not family, it’s friends and neighbors with similar age kids. I help them and they help us, it’s rare but we know we are there for each other.
Last week during a storm my kid (11) was at the pool and they closed for thunder. I wasn’t there, a friend of mine brought her home, that’s being a village….
+1
The Village has to be reciprocal, OP - otherwise it is just “using someone”, which does happen.
I have been the friend who got used in this way and it's demoralizing. And also made me less willing to offer my time when people need it, because it's so draining to be generous with your time and energy only to have people totally disappear when you need help.
I think that's one of the big obstacles to forming a village. You need mutual buy in and reciprocity, and I think there are more people today who are happy to take and not to give, and that in turns leads to people like me, who have to learn to give less just for our own sanity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. One friend worked really hard to cultivate it and now it’s a group of families who are truly always there for each other. We text each other throughout the week. Celebrate each others successes, cry together, watch each other kids; now that they’re older, the kids wander in and out of each others houses. The kids are very much like cousins and I have a group of women (and their husbands) that I know I can call on at any minute. I am very lucky but to my first point, it takes hard work to get there. You can do it too.
But, again, when they were younger and you were working who watched the kids?
Your premise is false because the aspects of the “village” that OP is asking about are benefits associated with a time when most women didn’t work outside the home. So, their village didn’t provide that kind of care either. Those of us who paid for early child care during the work day but have friends or family that we can rely heavily on do indeed have that level of support OP is asking about. And it is amazing and to Pp’s you just have to never move or let your friends move lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. One friend worked really hard to cultivate it and now it’s a group of families who are truly always there for each other. We text each other throughout the week. Celebrate each others successes, cry together, watch each other kids; now that they’re older, the kids wander in and out of each others houses. The kids are very much like cousins and I have a group of women (and their husbands) that I know I can call on at any minute. I am very lucky but to my first point, it takes hard work to get there. You can do it too.
NP - I had this and was the person who cultivated it. It's hard work AND a lot of luck: people you like that much in close proximity, adults who all get along decently and have similar flexibility, no one moving away (which is what happened to my "village"), etc. Not everyone can do it, frankly, for lacking the neighbors or the skills to cultivate or whatever. Cherish every moment of it when you do have it.
+1 to the luck part. A fellow mom and I cultivated this in our neighborhood when our kids were babies and it was great for about a year. Then the pandemic hit, people locked down, several families moved away, everything fell apart. I'm still friends with the one friend I helped organize this with, but she no longer lives nearby. I am in touch with a couple of the others, one is close but is moving soon, the other lives across town. We met when our kids were babies, they are all 5/6 years old now. Everyone was well intentioned, it just couldn't withstand outside factors.
I've notice that our neighborhood has become much more transient in recent years since Covid, actually, which works against this. I feel like every week I learn about a new neighbor who is moving elsewhere for a job or more space or different school opportunities. There was some of that before but it's ramped up a lot and now I feel like building a village is so unlikely. My kid's "best friend" at school the last three years running has moved away each time. She handles it great, but man it's hard to start back up with new families each year trying to build connections.
I think I'm just burned out on community building at this point. I built my village, it fell apart, I feel too tired to try and do it again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. It’s not family, it’s friends and neighbors with similar age kids. I help them and they help us, it’s rare but we know we are there for each other.
Last week during a storm my kid (11) was at the pool and they closed for thunder. I wasn’t there, a friend of mine brought her home, that’s being a village….
+1
The Village has to be reciprocal, OP - otherwise it is just “using someone”, which does happen.
I have been the friend who got used in this way and it's demoralizing. And also made me less willing to offer my time when people need it, because it's so draining to be generous with your time and energy only to have people totally disappear when you need help.
I think that's one of the big obstacles to forming a village. You need mutual buy in and reciprocity, and I think there are more people today who are happy to take and not to give, and that in turns leads to people like me, who have to learn to give less just for our own sanity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. One friend worked really hard to cultivate it and now it’s a group of families who are truly always there for each other. We text each other throughout the week. Celebrate each others successes, cry together, watch each other kids; now that they’re older, the kids wander in and out of each others houses. The kids are very much like cousins and I have a group of women (and their husbands) that I know I can call on at any minute. I am very lucky but to my first point, it takes hard work to get there. You can do it too.
But, again, when they were younger and you were working who watched the kids?
you are a village parent, you just don’t realize it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a in village. It’s not family, it’s friends and neighbors with similar age kids. I help them and they help us, it’s rare but we know we are there for each other.
Last week during a storm my kid (11) was at the pool and they closed for thunder. I wasn’t there, a friend of mine brought her home, that’s being a village….
Meh. That’s not a “village.” That’s an emergency contact. Does the friend watch your kid while you work?
I’m the PP, the friend was there with her own kids. Not an emergency contact, just happened to be at the pool.
This was just a recent example, if her kid was there alone I would have done the same thing. Earlier in the summer a different kid was there and my kid was getting a snack from snack bar. Different kid had no money, I gave her $3 to get an ice cream with my kid…… to me that’s village parenting too.
Nope. That’s nothing special. Sorry. I’d give a strange kid $3 for ice cream.
Anonymous wrote:My mom was friends with a half dozen other moms with kids my age. They watched each other's kids, drove us places, got together for holidays every year. I have pictures of myself with these kids every year of my life and I'm still in touch with most of them. Any one of the moms could (and did) scold me: they were my substitute parents not just playdate hosts. After we kids all launched, the moms helped each other through illness, divorce, elder care issues, and now their own aging concerns.
I had local grandparents and aunts active in my childhood, too, but these friends were our village.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a village. One friend worked really hard to cultivate it and now it’s a group of families who are truly always there for each other. We text each other throughout the week. Celebrate each others successes, cry together, watch each other kids; now that they’re older, the kids wander in and out of each others houses. The kids are very much like cousins and I have a group of women (and their husbands) that I know I can call on at any minute. I am very lucky but to my first point, it takes hard work to get there. You can do it too.
NP - I had this and was the person who cultivated it. It's hard work AND a lot of luck: people you like that much in close proximity, adults who all get along decently and have similar flexibility, no one moving away (which is what happened to my "village"), etc. Not everyone can do it, frankly, for lacking the neighbors or the skills to cultivate or whatever. Cherish every moment of it when you do have it.