M.M. asks from Athens, GA on December 26, 2011
Am I Sheltering My Child?
I don't think that I am, but I did get a negative comment from someone (not on here).
My son is 3. I don't let him listen to anything other than kids/educational music. He doesn't watch anything other than kids/educational television programs. I don't do anything inappropriate in front of him. My fiancee and I will only "peck" each other if he is around. I don't let him play with toy guns or anything that could be deemed violent.
I thought (and still do) that we are parents should let our children enjoy their innocence. So because he doesn't listen to the radio and can sing a popular song word for word, he is sheltered??
I might as well share the comment; we were waiting in a very long line during our Christmas shopping. There was a boy around my son's age in front of us singing some song (i don't really listen to the radio much myself). My son clapped for him. My other mother asked if he liked whatever the artist's name was. I told her he doesn't listen to the radio. She said so he doesn't listen to music. I told her only children's songs like Barney songs or songs they sing on Thomas the Train. She said I have to let him live. If I keep sheltering him like that, he will wind up "shooting up" his school or being an outcast.
I don't know what one has to do with the other. I need some advice, does my son need to know more of what is going on in the world. Am I doing something wrong???
So What Happened?™
Thanks Everyone, this is only my 2nd day using this site and everyone has been very helpful!!
-Of course when he is older, I wouldn't expect for him to only watch Barney lol. Hopefully I would have taught him well enough to know right from wrong.
-And yes as far as I am concerned Barney is not my forte. But he has only been in this world 3 years. For him, Barney is a rock star LOL
-Maybe I should rephrase the part about my fiancee and I, we do show affection but, not to the point where it's inappropriate (French Kissing, Booty or Boob Grabbing lol). We do not live together (doesn't really have anything to do with the question but I saw a comment about it :)
- I will prepare myself for the first time he shoots me with a paper gun, lol. I will have the "Guns Are Bad" talk ready to go.
UPDATE- I will do a "Guns Can Be Dangerous Depending On The Person's Intentions" talk (I will also come up with a better title :)
- He goes outside a great deal, he loves being outdoors, but not by himself. That is not going to happen. I will not budge on that. He is three. If we had a fenced in backyard then, maybe....
Featured Answers
A.F. answers from Fargo on December 26, 2011
Good grief, that woman is pathetic. He's THREE! You are letting him be a kid! My friend's nephew at age 3 could recite the lyrics, "......she had an a$$ that could swallow up a g-string". Great. Just great.
You are doing a great job, MM, and you are providing age appropriate music.
9 moms found this helpful
P.G. answers from Dallas on December 26, 2011
She was off base. I don't totally shelter my kid, but I don't let him watch everything or listen to everything. You're doing fine. Just don't protect him so much from life that he doesn't have a clue :)
5 moms found this helpful
A.C. answers from Detroit on December 26, 2011
Kudos to you. You're doing great. I do the same. I don't even want my 6 yr. old to see Alvin and the Chipmunks Chipwrecked because the girl chipmunks are dressed provocatively and sing about waving their tail back and forth.
5 moms found this helpful
More Answers
D.B. answers from Dallas on December 26, 2011
A parent's job for young children IS to shelter them from the world. You are appropriately sheltering your child. There are other musical options besides kids' songs available, but that doesn't mean they have to listen to current Pop songs. Personally, I'm apalled when I hear a child singing along to songs with adult themes. It is not cute in any way. I'm sure you will not force your child to listen to Barney only when he's 13. You are doing fine, and don't worry about that weird woman at the store.
11 moms found this helpful
I.G. answers from Seattle on December 26, 2011
Yes you are sheltering him. And no you are not doing anything wrong, because that is what you are supposed to do!
Just because other parents expose their kids to junk it doesn't mean that you have too. I don't.
I don't care of other 4 year old are gyrating their hips, singing raunchy lyrics, watch nickelodeon 24/7 and play videogames. That is not how I am raising my child. Period.
I think as parents we have an obligation to shelter our kids from the crazy consumerism, violence and sex glorified in today's media and art (music, movies, heck even books...). Yes, they will be exposed to it eventually and then you deal with it as it happens.
You need to do what's right for YOUR family and not let stranger butt in. Good luck.
10 moms found this helpful
H.W. answers from Portland on December 26, 2011
This mother who spoke to you had an iota of truth in a mess of ignorance, in my opinion. And what she should have been speaking about was the possiblility of social 'otherness', not school shooting. Sheesh....
I could write a very particular post on this, but won't. I'm in the same boat as you are. I am a mom who some people would say "shelters" my child. I'm pretty unapologetic about it, though. We are household which strives to model non-violent behavior, and letting my son be exposed to that sort of media is in conflict with our family culture.
The woman who spoke to you was doing a great job at showing off her amazing social skills and education, wasn't she? ONE- there is no pychological evidence that not allowing your child to watch mainstream tv and listen to the radio will make a person violent. I can't even do the mental gymnastics to work that one out, really. TWO- what exactly was *she* modeling for her child? How to be rude and intolerant of others who are parenting differently than she is? Umm... just my opinion, but that sense of entitlement to belittle others *can* be passed on to kids, and that particular sense of rudeness is something that will more likely be a detriment to her child, socially. The other mom was trying to bully you to legitimize her own behavior to herself, because if she knew it was "okay", she would have let it go.
Certainly, a lack of wide exposure to media in this culture can sometimes make a child appear socially 'other', and that is something to think about. You can broaden your child's exposure to good kids music just by going to your local library and checking out the kid cds. (I personally go nuts with just kid music, so we do a lot of jazz and non-offensive pop and rock. It's out there....just not on the radio so much.) My son didn't watch any 'kids tv' until last summer, when we decided that he was ready for some of the themes and storylines of "Dinosaur Train" (he was four at this point). Up until then, he watched concert videos and Mr. Rogers, because that's what he liked and wanted. We don't watch tv around him...we wait until he's gone to bed, or unless it's a video that's appropriate for his age, and even then, sometimes he's the one to say "I don't like it"....
I respect his need to have a *childhood*, I guess. For me, that isn't about imposing my world on him, but by being respectful and understanding that some media introduces situations which he doesn't have the tools to understand yet. Nor should he.
And if you haven't checked it out, today's featured mamapedia post was on Facebook and adults friending their children's friends, as well as bringing up the controversial 'lying about their age' to get kids younger than 13 on facebook. The author was mostly jeered by the comments thus far, with few exceptions. Some people feel justified in showing their kids that lying is okay when it works for you, and so is breaking the rules, so long as your kid is participating in the common culture and not feeling left out. Where are the lines between an 'adult' thing and a 'kid' thing? We don't give them alcohol, we don't let them drive, but the line between 'adult' and 'child' is becoming increasingly blurred. The lack of distinction between how children and adults dress or spend their time is disconcerting to me as both a mom and a preschool teacher.
MM, there are others like you! You are not alone.:) If you want more resources, check out blogs like "Empowered by Play" or TRUCE (Teachers Resisting Unhealthy Children's Entertainment). These have great sugggestions for fun, healthy, stimulating activities for kids and their parents. Don't let this other mom get you down. You are the parent to your son, you have to make reasonable decisions for your child. Not necking in front of your son, not turning on the popular radio station or letting him watch 'whatever' on television isn't going to turn him into a homicidal maniac. There are plenty of things that contribute to creating a murderer (parents with unchecked, severe mental illnesses, parents who teach their child they are entitled to anything, parents who bully and teach bullying, bad brain chemistry.... ) but not letting your kid listen to Kanye West or some other Radio King when he's three probably isn't one of them.
9 moms found this helpful
A.F. answers from Fargo on December 26, 2011
Good grief, that woman is pathetic. He's THREE! You are letting him be a kid! My friend's nephew at age 3 could recite the lyrics, "......she had an a$$ that could swallow up a g-string". Great. Just great.
You are doing a great job, MM, and you are providing age appropriate music.
9 moms found this helpful
K.. answers from Phoenix on December 26, 2011
I think people say you're sheltering him too much because they may be insecure about their own lax parenting.
I knew someone whose 5 year old was Lady Gaga for Halloween a couple years back. I thought that was ridiculous, personally.
Good for you for doing what you're doing. He's only 3. People need to mind their own business & worry about their own kids & selves. I think it's sad that people are letting their kids grow up so quickly in an already too fast world.
8 moms found this helpful
K.N. answers from Boston on December 26, 2011
In reading your post I envision a woman who is trying her best to raise her son and who is open enough to continually evaluate the choices she makes on her son's behalf. Way to go, mama!
Personally, I think there's a big difference between "sheltering" and "babying." Keeping things at a level you deem age-appropriate is not a bad choice. If you were keeping him a baby, that would be different. I think there's a time and a place for all kinds of behavior -- any that maybe 3 isn't quite the age to expose or introduce a lot of "big kid" or "grown up" stuff. What's the rush? Why can't he just enjoy Barney or Thomas the Train or whatever? Why should you -- or any of us -- be in a hurry to have our kids be adults or teenagers or whatever when, really, they're toddlers or pre-schoolers? There's plenty of time for that when they reach the appropriate age & developmental level.
My youngest 2 daughters are in their late teens and attended an all-girl, very small Catholic school (well, one is in her last year of HS there). Others questioned our choice, saying it was too _____ (fill in the blank; we heard it all from too small to too strict to too sheltering and more). They said the girls would resent it and that they'd rebel as soon as they got to college. Well, one of them is now a college sophomore and on the dean's list in a pre-med program. One of her college friends who attended a large, co-ed high school asked my daughter how she could be so comfortable away from home and meeting boys when she came from such an almost convent-like background. My daughter answered that the environment she came from gave her the confidence in herself to go forward when SHE was ready.
So, yeah, some may look at as "sheltering"; we look at age-appropriate child rearing as more like "incubating." Keep the kids cooking at the right temperature for the time they need to develop who they are and to take the next step.
I'm not a huge fan of babying kids and keeping them back, whether in fear or in lack of trust in them, but I'm a big fan of allowing kids to be kids.
Keep on choosing what works for YOUR family and don't pay any attention to people who want you to choose what works for theirs.
7 moms found this helpful
S.H. answers from St. Louis on December 26, 2011
my jaw dropped over the evil woman's comments!
You're doing a great job. As your son matures, you will find that it will be harder to censor his exposure to media/current events & entertainment. Be prepared for peer pressure to govern his wishes....
That said, with my daycare kids, I only allow 1 show/day....during the days where we can play outside. The rest of the time, we wing it. I do not listen to mainstream music until I see that the kids are being exposed to it with their parents. Right now, I have 2 2yo boys & a 4yo girl who listen to Top 40 Country....& that's okay with me. Still have to censor some of it.....can we say "Red Solo Cup"? LOL! + we never watch videos, simply use the Music Channels on cable. :)
Do what works best for you...& be prepared to adapt as he grows!
6 moms found this helpful
J.S. answers from Chicago on December 26, 2011
Barney music sucks. And if your kid still listens to it when he's a teen, well, then he would deserve to be an outcast. But you know that won't be the case. He'll grow out of Barney by next year.
That doesn't mean you can't expose him to music. There is plenty of age-appropriate music around - even on the radio! Go to the library and check out some classical CDs or Kids Rock.
Like everything else, it's your kid and you get to decide what they get to listen to, play with and watch on tv.
6 moms found this helpful
Email