Part of the reason why I feel negative emotions when I think about having kids, and it's something that my wife and I have discussed in depth, is that I feel a stigma around kids when I'm around some families with children. Our American culture kind of revolves around kids, and they have a script for young families like us.
The script started with dating. You were supposed to plan a kind of extravagant engagement, then a really special wedding. Then you were supposed to get a pet and buy a house. Then you are supposed to get pregnant, and plan a unique and exciting gender reveal. Next you decorate a cuter baby nursery in your house than any of your friends. Then you have the kid, give it a creative name that not many other kids have, and start posting monthly pictures on Facebook. Starting with the first birthday, each birthday party needs to be more extravagant and memorable than the last. Repeat the kid thing, then fast forward 18 years.
For one thing, my wife and I kind of feel out of touch with that script. Sure, we've walked part of that road already. We had a wonderful engagement, but it was kind of a private affair for us, our families, and her friends. We loved our wedding, because it strongly reflected our values and who we are (but a lot of our guests may have found it weird). We are total dog people and we love our house. It's the next steps that have us really uncomfortable, though. I totally get parents who walk it - you're super proud of your kid, love them like there's no tomorrow, and want everyone to know it. It can just have something of a negative impact on people with different values.
For years, we've both heard enough stories of extreme themed birthday parties to make us poke our eyes out. We've been barraged with the "Just wait until you have kids" and "I remember when we used to have free time" and "I haven't slept in months" and "You don't understand because you don't have kids" until we feel unworthy to stand next to parents and wonder if we actually do want to have kids. Perhaps it's our basic human need to feel like we're better than others that can cause us to make our lives sound super tough, but sometimes it seems like parents want to make it sound unappealing. I've even heard parents who had challenging kids disparage parents whose kids slept through the night and didn't have colic, as if they did something wrong!
If you've seen this movie you know why it's relevant here. |
It's also not that I think I've got a better recipe to parenthood than all the current parents out there. It's exactly the opposite, in fact. I have no clue how to be a parent, and I feel that acutely from all the stinging comments about how I am clueless. I have great respect for those who are out there doing it 24/7. Someday I'll be there and I'll be figuring it out on the fly, too. It's just that when non-parents like myself hear all about how being a parent is the hardest thing ever and look at this perfect hand-painted Mickey over all my brand new furniture, it doesn't really make us look forward to it. Facebook allows us to share these little windows on our lives that give an incomplete picture.
Katie and I will have kids some day, I'm sure. And I have no doubt that we'll get a little over-sharey with a picture or two of them on Facebook, and adjusting to a new rhythm of life will be challenging. But what if we don't decorate a baby room? What if our kid's first birthday consists of us and our family over with a cake? What if our lives continue to be about ministering to people, building community, and serving the ministries we love, but with the addition of a child? We'd like to bring a child into our world so that they learn our values and vision, not go into the child's world and use them to show off to our friends. We're not so sure that we want our kids growing up in a family where they are the Center of All Things.
Can we please, for the sake of young married couples like myself, stop making parenthood seem daunting and unappealing? Can we get a little less advice, a little less peer pressure, and just be part of your lives along with your kids?
But then again, what do I know? I'm not a parent yet.
Good post, John. I love being a dad, but I'm probably guilty of some of the behavior you mention, making a remark about the difficulty of parenting because it's acceptable to do so and is an easy way to get sympathy or sound tough. Even though you don't have kids, my philosophy on parenting sounds similar to yours, at least when I started. I want my kids to take on my values and learn certain things by certain ages to prepare them in ways that I was and in ways that I wish I was. I have a Google spreadsheet to track all these things I want my kids to learn by certain ages, but since my oldest is not even a year and a half I haven't been able to use it once and rarely feel compelled to add to it. Right now we are working on keeping his finger out of his nose and learning to stay still instead of flirt with every person he can see.
ReplyDeleteI think I'm more sympathetic to guys who talk about the challenges of parenting because it indicates to me that they are helping out. Sometimes I notice that it's often the moms who talk about it, and I wonder if that means that the dads aren't helping out at home as much as they should. I look forward to being a 50/50 partner in parenting with my wife, as we've been 50/50 partners in everything else. Since she does all the hard work before the kiddo's birth, I guess that means I get like 9 months of doing extra to make up for it!
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ReplyDeleteWe're young parents and I agree with you, there's too much advices from everywhere, even though our baby is the center of our Universe we don't like when there's too much attention to what and how we do from outside our family. We like to make cute photos with this tool: http://www.coolutils.com/ImageBox and sometimes ask for a professional photographer's help, but that's only to save these happiest moments with us and not to boast in front of someone else or to tell them it's something everyone has to do...
ReplyDeleteGreat post. I agree with you. Not planning for any kids either. Don't understand why people equate marriage to having kids.
ReplyDeletei agree with you!!!
ReplyDeletethanks for sharing
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