As
stressful, tiring, demanding and unendingly involving as parenthood
is, one of its many silver linings is that you begin with a fresh
script. With no content on the metaphorical page to revise – other
than the nuances and noise of how you were raised – you are free
to parent your child as you wish.
Becoming a parent means you have the opportunity to release any
dysfunctions passed down the family line for generations. It also
means using the foundation that you represent as the stepping stones
for customs, rites and traditions that continue to be passed down
into new lives, new years and possibly in new, innovative and refreshed
ways. For example, you may continue to host big family holiday dinners,
but perhaps pork won’t be on anyone’s fork in your home, because
you don’t cook or eat it.
Becoming
a parent also can mean avoiding pitfalls associated with how you
were raised. For example, perhaps you have negative memories of
being a latch-key kid and you’ve made educational and career choices
with the flexibility in mind that will enable you to meet them off
the school bus. Or maybe your folks never discussed anatomy or sex
with you. Their only wisdom might have been to “keep your legs closed”
or “don’t get knocked up.” In response, now with your brood, maybe
you’re frank and unapologetic about sexuality and human development.
(The words “penis,” “breasts” and “vagina” roll off my tongue like
drips from a rusted out faucet with little lady #1. I figure, if
she’s old enough to ask, she’s also old enough to know – and not
in cartoonish terms, like “wee-wee,” “pee-pee” or “privates.” Heck,
when she begins sprouting pubic hairs, I’ll probably give her a
hand-held magnified mirror, and we’ll go through all her parts with
an anatomical, labeled illustration close by for reference.)
Channel
surfing today, I caught a few minutes of the show “Wife Swap,” which
mutually shows two families trading wives and moms to new families
that are typically ideologically, economically, politically or socially
opposites. When this occurs, the collision between ideals and realities
can be seismic. Philosophies clash. Personalities crash down. Penalties
don’t jibe with what they’re accustomed to.
So, it made me think about what I do differently than my parents.
Here’s what I came up with:
1) We’re more vocally and physically affectionate, saying countless
“I love you’s” and sharing numerous hugs and kisses throughout the
day.
2)
I tell little lady #1 and little lady #2 how fabulous they are in
beauty and brains. There’s no shortage of praise in this house,
and if they have self-esteem issues, it will come from the external
world, not the homestead hub.
3) We eat few fried foods, no red meat, drink no soda.
4) We do way more with them socially than my parents did. When I
was growing up, going out to eat or to the park was a major treat.
Not so anymore, though this is admittedly more of a function of
our child-centric and uber-busy schedules than anything purposely
different from my parents’ bent.
In looking at the three
main parenting styles, I believe I trend toward a more democratic
style, while my parents were more authoritarian with occasional
windows of democratism.
So,
if you were on Wife Swap, what quirks and parenting “dos” would
the camera capture on tape? What are some things you do differently
from your parents on purpose? And what are some keepsakes you learned
from them that you’ll perpetuate as long as you can?
BLACK
MARRIED MOMMA are musings fromBlackCommentator.com
Columnist K. Danielle Edwards - a Black full-time
working mother and wife, with a penchant for prose, a heart for
poetry, a love of books and culture, a liking of fashion and style,
a knack for news and an obsession with facts - beating the odds,
defying the statistics. Sister
Edwards is a Nashville-based writer, poet and communications professional,
seeking to make the world a better place, one decision and one action
at a time. To her, parenting is a protest against the odds, and
marriage is a living mantra for forward movement. Her work has appeared
in BLACK
MARRIED MOMMA, MotherVerse Literary Journal, ParentingExpress, Mamazine, The Black World Today, Africana.com, The Tennessean
and other publications.She is the author of Stacey Jones: Memoirs of Girl & Woman, Body & Spirit,
Life & Death(2005) and is the founder and creative director of
The Pen: An Exercise in
the Cathartic Potential of the Creative Act, a nonprofit creative
writing project designed for incarcerated and disadvantaged populations.Click
here to contact Ms. Edwards.
Any BlackCommentator.com article may
be re-printed so long as it is re-printed in its entirety and full
credit given to the author and www.BlackCommentator.com. If the
re-print is on the Internet we additionally request a link back
to the original piece on our Website.
Your comments are always welcome.
eMail re-print notice
If you send us an eMail message
we may publish all or part of it, unless you tell us it
is not for publication. You may also request that we withhold
your name.
Thank you very much for your readership.
Your comments are always welcome.
September17
, 2009
Issue 342
is
published every Thursday
Executive Editor:
Bill Fletcher, Jr.
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield
Publisher:
Peter Gamble
Est. April 5, 2002
Printer Friendly Version
in resizeable plain
text format or pdf
format.