Excerpt: Free-Range Kids
When judgemental moms attack.
by Lenore Skenazy
June 2, 2009
In the book Free-Range Kids: Giving Our Children the Freedom We Had Without Going Nuts with Worry, Lenore Skenazy makes a case that,
statistically, our children are safer than they've ever been — and by parenting out of fear, we are robbing our kids of the childhood they deserve. Chapter 6, "Ignore the Blamers," discusses how parents inadvertently feed each other's fears. For more from Lenore Skenazy, read her Babble essay Parenting Without Fear.
"Can you believe she did that?"
Melissa, my upstairs neighbor, is staring wide-eyed, the way you do when you want someone else to open their eyes equally wide and shake their head in disbelief, so the two of you can sit there bonding over your utter shock.
I am having trouble doing this.
"Well . . . it . . . it doesn't seem so bad," I venture, squinting apologetically.
"Lenore! I could have taken her baby and she would never have seen him again! She was crazy!"
Who's crazy: people who trust other people, or people who don't?
Ah, the crazy wars again. Who's crazy: People who trust other people, or people who don't?
In this case, I have to say Melissa was officially crazy. Because the person she did not trust was . . . herself. Here's the story.
She — Melissa — was waiting in the checkout line at Costco, the giant warehouse store, with her groceries and her daughters, aged two and five. The woman in front of her suddenly remembered she had to get something at the back of the store and asked Melissa if she'd
mind watching her baby, who was in the shopping cart. Melissa said fine and off the woman, a stranger, sprinted.
She came back two minutes later and Melissa had kidnapped and killed her baby.
No, no! Come on. Obviously, that's not what happened. She came back two minutes later, thanked Melissa and that was that. One mom helping another. But even if that's how the other lady saw it, that's not what Melissa saw. She saw a wildly irresponsible
woman entrusting her precious little boy to a total stranger who could have easily turned out to be a psycho killer buying bulk paper towels and Goldfish crackers — John Wayne Gacy in a dress.
All of which is a pretty harsh assessment of that mom's actions. First of all, the baby-mom did not choose just anyone. She chose another mom. One who probably would have had a pretty hard time yanking the boy out of his cart, abandoning her groceries (and
place in line!), dragging him out of the store, dragging her own kids out of the store, remembering where she'd parked, unlocking the car, shoving everyone inside, strapping them into their car seats and then gunning across the border, all while ignoring
her little girls shrieking, "Mommy! Why are you stealing that lady's baby?" And, "We want our Goldfish!"
©2009 Lenore Skenazy and Babble Media
About the Author
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Lenore Skenazyis a syndicated columnist. She has written for everyone from Mad Magazine to The Times of London, and been a commentator on NPR, CNBC and The Food Channel. She lives in New York City with her two sons and husband, all of whom think she is NOT "America's Worst Mom." ("America's Worst Housekeeper"? That's another story.) |
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