Last weekend I thought I had a brilliant idea. I had the
kids by myself and we needed a week’s worth of groceries. After they both spent
Saturday playing in a basketball game, going to a party, watching cartoons and
playing video games at their friends’ houses, I decided Sunday morning that the
fun was over. I had access to free babysitting (their grandparents) while I did
the shopping, but I chose to have the kids come with me to the store instead.
I wasn’t trying to punish them for anything, but apparently
I was trying to punish myself. I told myself before we left that it was
necessary for my children to learn that life isn’t all about having fun. That
the food they enjoy every other day doesn’t just magically appear in the
refrigerator. As their parents, my wife and I make sacrifices so they can eat
when we tell them they can.
And that’s true. It’s better to learn young that life is
full of responsibilities. This strategy of teaching your kids what it takes to
run the household is a classic parenting technique. I certainly don’t suspect
that all parents do this, but I also know it isn’t a practice specific to me.
So I felt vindicated in my decision.
I also soon felt very stupid.
Because instead what happened was the kids enjoyed
themselves at the grocery store and I spent most of the time telling them to
“put that back,” “stop jumping on the cart,” and “when no one’s looking, spit
the milk back in the carton!”
Why do we do this? I think it’s so we can convince ourselves
we’re teaching a valuable life lesson, which in turn generates a positive feeling
of our parenting skills. The only problem is, this rosy feeling towards the enriching
lesson we’ve imparted is wildly disproportionate to the actual impact it makes
on our kids.
The reality is, there are plenty of opportunities to teach
the importance of responsibility. It’s kind of ridiculous to convince yourself
that this one moment will be the one that drives home the point, especially
when it’s to your own detriment. I sacrificed much more of my own happiness in
order to keep my kids from extending theirs.
And I knew by doing this that I was in for a rough trip to
the store; that by the car ride home, I would be beaten down and my kids would
be singing the theme song to Sophia the
First. I didn’t care. It was necessary, I told myself.
How masochistic is that? It’s perversely masochistic, I tell
you. Way more perverse than anything you might request in the bedroom.
My
kids could have spent a pleasant morning with their grandparents, with a
lifetime ahead of them to learn about responsibility (not to mention the
numerous times we had already taught
them about responsibility), and I could have enjoyed a quiet trip to the store
without people looking at me as if I was the one who put splotches of chocolate
sauce all over an open pack of toilet paper.