Among other things, motherhood is
probably one of the best soft skills training which sharpens many of your
skills such as time management, leadership skills, problem-solving capabilities
etc. Resolving a fight between your child and another one in the
park, while all the other mothers are watching is one of the trickiest situations
which helps you excel at diplomacy.
The reason why your child and his friend have
become sworn enemies, is irrelevant. What you need to do is, repeat standard
statements such as:
“Kids,
say sorry to each other, you are friends…it was a mistake”
“She
is your friend, share your toys”
“You
can all play here, take turns…” or something similar. You should not
give up until the children get bored of listening to you resolve their fight
and finally, realize that it is better to be friends and run away from you.
You may also warn your own child of the consequences if he does not stop fighting. One such acceptable warning (in public) is as follows:
You may also warn your own child of the consequences if he does not stop fighting. One such acceptable warning (in public) is as follows:
“I
will not allow you to go play for 1 day/ 3 days/ a week (progressing depending
on his stubbornness to give in).
However, when it comes to the other kid,
you have to be the sweetest and use the choosiest of words to convey the same
message to give up fighting. You may not raise your voice. Most importantly, keep
smiling.
Once you are back that the park bench, make it look like it was nothing. You must declare that you effortlessly resolved the issue, got the children to be best friends again. Do not give out any details about which child was at fault, who is the worst behaved or anything like that.
Once you are back that the park bench, make it look like it was nothing. You must declare that you effortlessly resolved the issue, got the children to be best friends again. Do not give out any details about which child was at fault, who is the worst behaved or anything like that.
There is no point disclosing this
information which only brings unhappiness to the mother concerned. It is an
unsaid agreement between mothers to look out for each other’s
children, scold them if necessary, and be assured that the other mothers are
not going to judge you for that. We all know that it must be for some good, to
protect the children from something dangerous, like touching an electrical pole
in the park. All the children are the same here, they are all, at some point
going to misbehave. So, we mothers are a team there, we are all in it together.
Having said that, there are times when we
literally dissect and criticize the parenting skills of the mother who isn’t
there at the park on a particular day. There are mothers who proudly announce
that their children eat all-natural, only natural stuff. Do we believe it? Not
at all. There are those new mothers who say that their children do not know what
chocolate is. Yes, we say, wait till he goes to school. No mother having two
or more kids will probably say that. They are at a stage where if the child
agrees to two spoons of rice for one M&M, we will rejoice and happily
comply.
New
mothers have patience, they will shield the child from everything possible, and
however as they start growing up or the second one arrives, all the patience
vanishes. You just want to make sure the kid is safe and healthy; he is eating enough
good stuff. You stop getting up and running to the child every time he falls in
the park. You shout sitting on the park bench” You are brave. Come on,
get up” and we get back to our conversation with
the other mommies.
As the children grow up, you start
expecting them to behave in a certain way and be the best at what they do. You
start pushing them into all classes, learn guitar, learn karate, and go join
weekend robotics. You start worrying over their exam results. You start
comparing. Your child’s and achievements versus his peers. You
get worried and frustrated over his lower grades, or cry foul if he doesn’t
win some poetry recitation competition. We know it’s
wrong, we know it’s not fair. We don’t
show these emotions to our child. We say” well done, you will
win the next time” and pat him on the back for
participating.
The failure bothers you more. You start
blaming yourself. I must be doing something wrong, or maybe I am not doing
enough. How does the other lady manage it all? She seems to have everything
under control, her child’s behaviour, his grades, his food, and
the house!
Being a mother is a tough job which is not
appreciated enough. There is a no-growth as such, no appraisals, no
recognition, and no interaction with people beyond a certain group, no monetary
gain of course and is very monotonous. The contests, events that your child
participates in bring you excitement, it gives you a chance to prove
something, to others and to yourself. You put your heart and soul in the
preparation and the child’s achievement becomes yours. They give
you happiness, challenge, the appreciation that you crave for.
Mothers who are not working outside are
very lonely these days. Being a nuclear family and staying in a city where you
have no relatives or friends, perhaps in a place where you don’t
know the local language, makes it tougher for you to meet new people, and
interactions do not go beyond greeting one another. At such a point, when all
your work and time is invested in your child, you feel like you need to
rewarded, recognized for your masterpiece: your child. The failures of your
child lead to mothers envying one another, sometimes even chiding your own
child.
I have been fortunate to find friends
while I went through these tough emotions. All you need is someone to hear you
out when you are having a bad day. We mothers have a deep understanding of what
we go through individually, and we assume that the other one has it better.
Trust me no one has it better. We can go beyond thinking it is some kind of
competition or race as to who has it all under control and rather just be
companions in this journey.
Nice article with self experience !!!
ReplyDeleteOne more masterpiece. A very well written article once again.����
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!!
DeleteYou can do Ph.d. in child psychology, keep writing 😊
ReplyDeleteThat would be great but for starters, I hope I understand my kids a little better;)
DeleteVery well written Sayali. Yes mothers are always taken for granted by children and husbands. The longing for appreciation vanishes once a mother sees the fruits of her hard work & sacrifice. God bless you for bringing out the feelings of a caring and loving mother.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the feedback.
DeleteLove the idea of boring them into submission if they are fighting, going to try that! I’m definitely at the stage where getting two spoons or rive eaten in exchange for an m&m is a win!
ReplyDeleteLovely article and very readable. I love the idea we can all be companions in our journeys
ReplyDeleteThanks you for your feedback:)
ReplyDeleteA great read and one I can empathise with
ReplyDeleteClearly written from the heart. Keep going with what you've been doing Mama. We, women are tougher than we think we are ��
ReplyDelete