Anonymous wrote:I am happy how my kids turned out. They are teens now and nice, thoughtful, smart young adults. I was lucky enough to be home with them till they were in MS. It was a lot of fun to be the and volunteer during ES.
Some things i would do differently are:
Get my kids to read more
Not tell my kid about Santa till he was older. I thought he was old enough but he was not
Travel with them more. COVID dampened that a little
They grow so fast, never enough time with them. Enjoy it all!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have done more to pursue family friendships/community for my kids. During a mental health/mindfulness activity at school my kids were asked what adults love them and they couldn't think of any besides DH and I.
thats kind of a surprising question from a school as that could be so triggering for some kids who come from a broken home, etc....wow.
I think if your kids were able to state you and husband being the two who loves them, they are winning!
Having loving adults (who don't necessarily have to live with you!) is a protective factor for adverse childhood experiences, so I understand why they asked and why teaching children to think about the adults who love them could be useful for a mindfulness/stress relief program. I agree that making kids talk out loud about it could lead to them revealing stuff they might prefer to keep private (just like family tree and other assignments) but encouraging them to write it down without sharing it with the class makes sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have done more to pursue family friendships/community for my kids. During a mental health/mindfulness activity at school my kids were asked what adults love them and they couldn't think of any besides DH and I.
thats kind of a surprising question from a school as that could be so triggering for some kids who come from a broken home, etc....wow.
I think if your kids were able to state you and husband being the two who loves them, they are winning!
Anonymous wrote:I would have moved to a more family-friendly area before having kids. We're moving now but should have done it years ago and it's harder to move after your kids are a bit older, are in school, and have friends. We talked about it but thought it wouldn't be that big of a deal and in retrospect I think it's really made everything about our lives harder for no particularly good reason.
I would have stood up for myself more when I was pregnant and in the first year after becoming a mom instead of being steamrolled by my spouse, mom, and ILs, all of whom regularly just ignored my needs and opinions. I eventually learned to stand up for myself, but I went through a lot of grief during those two years because I was trying too hard to make other people happy and wasn't doing what I needed to take care of myself. Resulted in PPD, a huge step back in my career, and just generally struggling during a time that should have been about our family coming together.
I've also made mistakes as a parent akin to what OP is talking about, especially around learning when to hold the line with kids. But I think I had to go through it, I've learned from it and so have my kids, and in general I think we found the right balance. We have really healthy relationships between kids and adults in our family, but also the kids are well-behaved, listen to us, and trust just us to make good decisions for them while also being understanding and taking they preferences into account when it makes sense. I especially struggled with my oldest but being a parent is a bit of a trial by fire and I think you kind of have to make those mistakes to understand how to do it. I am really not convinced that anyone gets it exactly right from the start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My inclination as a mom runs counter to this but I wish they weren't so sheltered. I can tell them about many things but it's not the same as experience. I appreciate their innocence but it's not for this world.
How did you shelter them?
Anonymous wrote:I would have moved to a more family-friendly area before having kids. We're moving now but should have done it years ago and it's harder to move after your kids are a bit older, are in school, and have friends. We talked about it but thought it wouldn't be that big of a deal and in retrospect I think it's really made everything about our lives harder for no particularly good reason.