Sorry, 'British Nanny,' I Let My Kids Choose Their Sippy Cups

My kids are human beings. With whom I am in relationship. It is one characterized by affection, trust, and attachment. I believe my children heed my influence because they feel secure and loved and free to make wise choices and empowered to behave well.
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At this point, everyone who knows anyone with a kid has likely seen the latest viral parenting piece from a "British Nanny" letting us know 5 Reasons Parenting is in a Crisis. Most of them left me with that record-scratch sound playing in my head.

For one thing, I'm an ACTUAL PARENT, and I'm not here to tell you a bulleted list of how to raise your kids. Because if twins have taught me anything, it's that every kid is different, and every parent is different, and only you know what is best for your child. We're all just doing the best we can here, and my biggest takeaway in two years has been that we all need a little more grace and a lot more help.

But for another, what really bothered me the most is that Emma, the aforementioned nanny, characterizes every interaction between parent and child as a power struggle, one in which parental will must be exerted at all costs, lest children get the idea that they "are in charge here." She makes an example of a child requesting a particular sippy cup, and suggests that parents should ignore their child's request, ignore their child's feelings about the request, and even ignore the outpouring of emotions, which she calls a tantrum, that follows the parent's indifference to the child's small request. Only a tyrant sees every interaction with another person as an opportunity to remind the other person of their powerlessness.

My children are not animals to be broken or wills to be crushed. I make many, most even, decisions for them at this point in their lives, but my biggest goal is to raise kind people who make wise choices. This means I must first model kindness to them and for them at every turn, but also that I must give them the opportunity to practice making choices, even in small areas, so that they know they have the power to make wise choices in big areas too. It's no skin off my back, before pouring some milk, to say, "Would you like your milk in the Tinkerbell cup or the Toy Story cup?" It's a small gesture that sends my kids a bigger message: I care about you, and I want you to be able to make choices. Sometimes, they don't have a choice -- they must wear shoes and weather appropriate clothing. But I could let them choose among some outfit options, for example.

And, in the event that say, we are out in public and I already packed the Toy Story cup, and it's the only cup we have, and they suddenly really want the Tinkerbell cup, which is at home? And if their response to my, "I'm sorry, this is the cup we have for you here, if you want a drink, it will have to be in this cup," is a "tantrum," my response will not be to abandon them to the storm of their emotions or walk away as the nanny suggests, but to coach them through their feelings so they might learn to deal with disappointment. Because while Emma thinks giving my child choices or coaching her through an emotional outburst shows I'm "afraid of her," what really shows a fear of the increasingly-independent and assertive individuals my children are becoming is an attempt to control them at all costs for fear that I might lose some sort of power or authority in their eyes.

My kids are human beings. With whom I am in relationship. It is one characterized by affection, trust, and attachment. I believe my children heed my influence because they feel secure and loved and free to make wise choices and empowered to behave well. And, I must say, I have two fabulous children who are constantly complimented on their behavior, but who are also so very two a lot of the time. This doesn't mean I have "lowered the bar." This relationship is not, and will never be, a power struggle, because I refuse to make it one. I am not afraid that allowing my children the freedom to make small choices will undermine my role as their mother.

This part especially broke my heart: "Babies must learn to self-soothe instead of sitting in a vibrating chair each time they're fussy. Toddlers need to pick themselves up when they fall down instead of just raising their arms to mum and dad." Children learn to self-soothe in the arms of their parents. In the safe embrace of people who love them and who help them to take deep breaths, to engage in positive self talk, and who coach them through emotions that often feel very large and overwhelming to very small people. This doesn't mean I rush to pick my kids up every time they fall down, but if they fall down and cry out or reach for me, I will always be there to pick them up and kiss their booboos and help them learn how to calm down. Because this is what it means to foster the kind of secure attachment that gives them the strength to be independent and confident.

This is what works for us. I'm just a mom of two. I'm no British nanny. And I don't presume to speak for you. But I'm not afraid. I haven't lowered the bar. And I'm not contributing to some kind of societal crisis. Likely you aren't either.

This post first appeared on The Adventures of Ernie Bufflo.

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