Unwanted parenting advice

Today’s post is from the lovely Pauline who is fed up with unasked for parenting advice and critisicm. A great post! I’ll let her introduce herself, but have a read and tell us, have you ever felt the same frustration? This is Pauline’s first guest post so show her some bloggy love folks, Nicki x

Hi! I’m a 42 year old wife and mother of a 3 year old boy, full time mum, but definitely not stay-at-home!  I’m based in the South East of England and I’m on Twitter as @PollyBurns2.  This year I’m learning Italian, next year I’m starting a writing course.

Why is it that people think it’s perfectly acceptable to offer unsolicited advice about parenting as soon as you’ve had a child?  Not just people who know you, but random strangers.  Not just people with children of their own, but people who have never had children.  We desperately wanted children but found it difficult to conceive at all and then lost one before my son was born.  I didn’t feel overwhelmed at his existence, I willingly followed his lead.  He was an easy baby and we bonded immediately.

It was reading a piece by Nicki Cawood that got me thinking about the random advice that I and my friends received when we became mums for the first time.  Nicki’s standpoint is not to apologise for the parenting choices you make, but this can be quite difficult in the face of people who clearly think they are doing the right thing.

Here is a good example of this: carrying my weeks old son in a carrier on the front of my body, I was holding a takeaway coffee cup with a lid and about half an inch of almost cold coffee.  I was stopped by a woman who said she’d seen “so many” children scalded by coffee in cups exactly like the one I was holding and would I please not carry it around while I had my son in the carrier.  I was completely taken aback as this was my first experience of being accosted in the street and I wasn’t prepared for it.  I calmly explained that there was about half an inch in the bottom of this cup (with a lid on it) and it was all but cold anyway.  I have often wondered what made that woman think that I was being an irresponsible parent.  Do I look like the type of person who would put her son in obvious danger?  What does such a person look like?  Unfortunately, people who should know me better were also very ready with their advice.

I chose to breastfeed my son, which attracted lots of comments from various family members.  These ranged from feeding him so often is no good for him to how I’m really not physically built for breastfeeding and would find it difficult.  This last was from my sister who had breastfed her own first child and so knew what it was like.  She had clearly found it difficult but my viewpoint was:  I have breasts, what else do I need?  A childless member of the family said that we would need to “top him up” with formula as breast milk wasn’t enough.  Another said I shouldn’t be breastfeeding at all.

It was the underlying assumption that everyone else has the best interests of my child at heart and I didn’t that really bothered me.  In the supermarket a woman told me that the carrier I was using (same front carrier) was bad for my son’s neck.  Bad how, we asked?  She said she’d raised several children and was professionally qualified to comment.  She didn’t elaborate further!  What is wrong with these people?  Don’t they remember all the unwanted advice they got?

I’ve found that people get very upset if you don’t take their advice.  They often check back later to see if you took their wisdom on board and get quite hurt if you haven’t.  I was informed that carrying my son with me all the time would make him clingy.  In fact he’s now a very sociable and outgoing boy and I believe that’s because he feels secure at home in his relationship with his parents.  I got lots of comments along the lines of “still carrying him?”, “haven’t you put that child down yet?”  I wonder what they would have said had they know that in fact, I spent the first year of his life just cuddling him and staring at him!

A word about advice from the health professionals, who you believe know what they are talking about.  Whilst it’s not exactly unwanted, in my experience some of it just made no sense at all.  Whether the subject is bottle feeding, keeping the baby in your room until 6 months or not weaning before 6 months, the pressure is enormous, even if only expressed in subtle ways.  My friend was breastfeeding twins and was told her boys weren’t growing quickly enough. She gave in to this huge emotional pressure at 12 weeks and regretted it ever since.  My son’s cot was at my side of the bed and we kept waking one another every hour or so from 15 weeks to 22 weeks, when we finally went against advice and put him in his own room.  We got a whole four hours sleep that night!  All in one go!  Bliss!

Here’s some advice I did take though!  Lots of people stopped me and told me how quickly this time would pass, and to love and enjoy him.  “Keep an eye on him” said one particularly creepy chap in the supermarket, advice I thought was well worth heeding!  Unfortunately it was never to be that we would have more children so we are very glad that we followed our own instincts, ignored everyone else and just did it all our way.

 

Netmums and Me!

If you use the internet and are a parent, trying to conceive or are pregnant, you’ll have heard of Netmums (unless you live under a virtual rock!). What do you actually know about Netmums though?

I’ve been a Netmums user on and off since I fell pregnant with Kieran (so 2004). During that time Netmums has evolved into the parenting site to rival all others.

More than “just” a forum, Netmums is packed full of useful features, and is easy to navigate which is ideal for me who is a Mum without a huge amount of time, but who still needs information from time to time. I love the fact that I can set my page to my local area so that I can receive relevant local info as well as national. Days out, local services and news are just as important as the world-wide going-ons and it’s great to be able to access these without fishing around different sites. In fact, that is one of the big plus points about Netmums, at the risk of sounding like a cheesy carpet store advert – you really do have everything you could need or want all under “one roof”.

My favourite sections (those that have been the most helpful to me!) are:

What’s On? Local event’s and days out which I can view by month. A great way to find places for the kids to go, whether you are planning in advance or wake up and fancy a trip.

Noticeboard. Another local feature where local parents / carers can post offering information, asking for help. This works brilliantly alongside the forums (Coffee House) which has much more information but for a quick answer or short-dated info, this is the place to be.

Work & Finance. I don’t visit this section much any more having transformed myself over time into something of a frugality / moneysaving fan but when I first decided to leave my previous career behind to be at home with the then newborn Kieran, this was a well of easy to understand information and resources.

The Parent Bloggers Network. As well as being part of the network (which means my posts go out to Netmum members on the site) I have found some fantastic new (as in to me) blogs that had up until recently had fallen under my radar. There are some very talented, witty, funny and intelligent people out there!

Nearly new. Some great bargains are to be had here! Again a local feature where you can buy, sell or giveaway items. No fees or complicated set ups – just an easy to use way to shift the clutter.

Great content! Throughout the site there is great, regularly updated info, how-to’s, news and pieces of interest. A great way to keep in touch with what is going on it the world around you!

These are just a few of the fantastic things you can find on Netmums! What I do very much like is the atmosphere (if that makes sense?). This is a well run, glossy, up to date side that identifies with what parents and carers want – I know this because they are constantly asking us what we want! There is no moaning and bitching, just an easy to use place to find info to make your life that bit easier or for fun and relaxation. We’ve found some great family friendly recipes, games and projects on Netmums!

If you haven’t visited, or haven’t been by for a while, why not pay a visit? You can also say hi to the Netmums team on  Twitter.

*I haven’t been asked to write this, I asked Netmums if they minded my doing a write-up of my personal experiences and if I could pinch a logo or two. These are my own thought based on my own experiences.