The Babble List: Parenting Trends

10 that are in, 10 that are out. by Madeline Holler

July 8, 2008

Remember how it used to be? Good parents spanked their kids; bad parents let kids call adults by their first names. Good parents warned children against sitting too close to the TV. These days, good parents don't even own a TV. Sharing feelings/owning feelings/thinking about feelings/feeling feelings constitutes a child's first (and often only) step toward good behavior -- no more sore bottoms "for their own good."

  RATE THIS NOW!
+ DIGG

+ STUMBLE



How could our parents have been so wrong? How do we know we're right? Well, they weren't and we don't. Like skirt lengths and math curriculum, parenting has its trends. So, annual braggy Christmas letters are out, but blogging to strangers about your child's under-achievements? Very in. Living vicariously through your child's birthday celebrations is out. But that $1,000 stroller? Sorry, still in. — Madeline Holler

Wave Bye-Bye! 10 Parenting Trends That are Out:

1. Same name, different spelling: Katelyn, Kaitlyn, Catelin and Kadlen are going to get together and really hammer their parents over this one. As are the -aydens (fill in the first letter) and any other child who (1) suspects parents are just making up names and (2) has never seen his or her name spelled correctly, ever. (Jennifers with one "n" thought they had it bad!)

2. Three-ring birthday parties: We only got cupcakes and water balloons, but our kids are getting zoo animals, helicopter rides and $20,000 teas! Maybe we'll never return to pin-the-tail on the donkey (too dangerous — See #5), but we middle-class mortals are backing it down, hanging up streamers, making Grandma the star attraction and remembering what birthdays are really for: cupcakes (heavy on the frosting) and presents.

3. Bringing baby to work: We love that offices are becoming more flexible, but we suspect in tough economic times this particular perk will soon come to an end. Not soon enough for many co-workers — and even for some parents who tried it. Of course, this doesn't mean there aren't other ways of making the workplace family-friendly. Babycare down the hall, perhaps? Longer and paid parental leaves?

4. Hiding vegetables: Did it ever catch on? Not likely, what with all that damn steaming, pureeing, tucking and tricking! In other good news, parents are also turning their backs on caring quite so much about organic-everything (especially since the new trend is going local rather than organic). Five servings of a fruits and veggies rainbow is the overall goal. But every single day? Eh. Too much work. (Have a spinach-free brownie and think about it.)

5. Clear the landing pad: Helicopter parenting is headed for a crash — a good thing. Moms now negotiate grades with their kids' college professors, dads shake hands with baby's future employer. And there are kids who, for the love of Band-Aids!, have never, ever been hurt. Leading the way out of this prison of love is a nine-year-old NYC solo subway rider. Will others rip off the shin guards, turn in unchecked homework, and follow?


Out:
In:
01-05
Discuss this article (19)   |   PRINT THIS ARTICLE  |   EMAIL TO A FRIEND  |     RATE THIS NOW!
+ DIGG  |   + STUMBLE  |     |   + MY YAHOO  |   + GOOGLE  |   RSS
 

About the Author

author bio Madeline Holler is a writer and mother of two. She lives in Long Beach, California.

New This Week




What's New on Babble

Daily Poll

Are you getting the swine flu vaccine for your kids?