So here we all are, having survived Thanksgiving hopefully mostly intact,
and we are headed straight into the upcoming holidays, for some, it will be Hanukkah,
or Kwanza, Bodi Day, or Winter Solstice for us it is Christmas.
Through the decades, many celebratory traditions have
emerged including the mystifying tradition of bringing toddlers into museum like
or trinket shop like homes and running around behind them frantically saying
no, no, no,(!) While apologizing the whole time. Sounds super fun!
I was asked yesterday if we were going to put up a Christmas
tree this year. I am still somewhat
undecided, but I lean towards no, because we do have a 14 month old. I likened it to someone putting a delicious,
cool IPA on the table next to me, and then slapping my hand every time I try to
take a sip. Not cool man...
While some folks may make themselves feel righteous by
stating "well they have to learn" or “they have to exercise control”,
that really does not take the parents
into consideration at all. I mean, they
packed up their whole family, and dragged them and their five pounds of gear to
your house, so that they can spend the entire visit in a frenzy, spending no
actual time with anyone, feeling frustrated and inadequate, and that's before
we get to the dreaded sit down meal. At that point we are just sneaking wine in
the corner or in the bathroom, shoving some amount of food in our mouths, and
loudly whispering “this isn't working, when can we go” to our spouse ? Tones
quickly get more frantic and more frustrated with the toddlers, because of
course if they could just do it right, we would not be in this disaster.
Well, guess what? They can't, so you have to change the
game. Read any Neuroscience studies on
this topic, and they will tell you about the VERY strong primal sections of the
brain that are in full force long before the frontal lobes decide to catch up. Infants
and toddlers react in fight or flight, they live in the moment in instant
gratification, and they don't care if you are being embarrassed in front of
Great Aunt Selma because "in her day children were seen and not heard, had
jobs by age ten, slept by themselves and ate sandwiches on day one…something
something..something..blah..”.
What kids do care about, is feeling like they made you sad,
or feeling sad themselves. It is our job to protect them from that kind of
hyped up bullshit, and traditions that stifle and shame young families causing resentment,
hurt feelings, or for some, they just shut down through the holiday because
they cannot deal, or don’t want to.
Join me this year in not starting those kinds of traditions.
Set boundaries and expectations early with those who invite you over, and if
they cannot take steps to ensure a nice visit, then kindly decline and invite
them to your home instead. We teach
people how to treat us, and how to set expectations with us, so don’t play into
that stuff this year!
Be happy, be free, be relieved. Remember, it is your holiday too,
not just Aunt Selma's. Eat simply, smile
often and come January, it will not matter how pretty your home was,
how much you cooked, or how calmly the kids tried to sit. What will matter is love, laughter, and not
creating trauma for them or for you, when the holidays come back around. Break
the cycle, create new. There is far too much of “everything” going on in the
world right now, to be stressing about silly things like toddler behavior.
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