There was a kid running at the neighborhood pool the other day. The pool attendant asked him to walkâââas pool attendants have done since pools existed. The boyâs dadâââa big-chested, serious kind of guyâââcame over to the attendant and told him (I swear Iâm not making this up), that as the childâs father, heâs the only one to tell his kid what to do, and that if the attendant has something to say, it should be directed at him, donât talk to his kid; heâll decide if his kid needs direction.

The attendant kept his cool (I would have rolled my eyes or worse) and repliedâââcarefullyâââthat it was his job to make sure that people follow the pool rules, and âno runningâ is pretty much the universal pool rule. The dad pushed back and added some aggressive posturing to intimidate the pool guy, saying that he didnât see anything wrong with what his kid was doing, so, as far as he was concerned, the pool guy needs to back off. In summary: The kid was free to run at the pool because the dad said so, fuck the pool rules, (this is America!) nobody tells my kid what to do except me.
Uh, ok.
âPeople are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty is revealed only if there is a light from within.â
â Elisabeth KĂŒbler-Ross

Thereâs a weird sort of fear spreading amongst reasonable grownups. My sisterâs family had some friends over. Or, maybe my sisterâs family went over to their place. I donât remember, doesnât really matter. Anyway, one of the adults gave one of my sisterâs kids some polite direction about sharing or something basic like that, you know, stuff people tell kids. Then the grownup realized the grave error in 21st century feedback rules concerning kids who arenât yours, and apologized to my sister for shamefully overstepping. âAre you KIDDING?â my sister said. âI absolutely want you to tell my kids if theyâre doing something you donât think they should be doing! In fact, do more of it! They need to learn to hear things from people other than me.â
If Iâm the only one who can tell my kids what to do, Iâve failed them in every possible way by making sure they have completely unrealistic expectations of the world. Also, I canât ever die, because my kids wonât be able to take care of themselves. Following Big-Chested Dad at the Poolâs logic, a lifeguard canât lifeguard, teachers canât teach, coaches canât coach and, later in life, managers canât manage… you see where this is going, right?
Is cushiony perfection for our kids a new national obsession? We all know That Mom in the neighborhood, who is literally at the school every day, escalating everything to make sure her kid gets an A, is chosen for Student Council, or gets placed in the gifted program. Later, when her kid is in college, professors will hang up on her and laugh behind her back because sheâll call about something thatâs none of her business.
All events are blessings given to us to learn from.
My middle schooler and his project partner failed to turn an assignment in on time, after many reminders of the deadline. The other kidâs mom (who I met once, briefly) came to my house and wouldnât leave until I talked with her for nearly an hour about the Injustice. She was heartbroken for the disappointment her kid must be feeling at the failure, and wanted to fix it somehow. She left, but I think it was only because I told her I had no idea how to reverse the course of what happened and suggested she escalate to a school administrator if she believed the teacher could be convinced to reverse his decision. I havenât heard back from her.

I donât mean to brag, but my high schooler fails at quite a few things. None of them too epic, but thereâs still time. We talked about it recently. I told him itâs my job to let him fail while heâs still at home with me, because he needs to learn how to lose his shit and then pick it up and move forward. Thatâs like the most major of life skillsâââin my experience, anywayâââand Iâll be damned if any kid of mine is going to fall to pieces his first semester in college because Iâm not there to fix life for him. You remember that person from your dorm days precisely because that person became an utterly forgettable shadow.
5 Things Super Successful People Do Before 8 AM
- Exercise
- Map Out Your Day
- Eat a Healthy Breakfast
- Visualization
- Make Your Day Top Heavy
This is an open notice to people who know my kids: You can tell them what to do. Itâs really, really OK. Tell them not to put their feet up on your coffee table. Tell them to stop running, not to play with that knife or not to touch your things. Actually, now that theyâre older, youâll likely be telling them not to eat all of your potato chips and beef jerky, and not to take that drink onto your freshly cleaned carpet. Whatever the rules are at your place, tell my kid to fall in. I have a selfish motive.
Original article : Medium



