In Defense Of The Wild Child

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Dear fellow nursery school moms, people in grocery stores, the teller at the bank, the receptionist at our doctor’s office and relatives who would love to say something but wisely refrain from doing so, I see you there.

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I see your raised eyebrows, and poorly hidden expressions of shock at my child’s behavior. And I certainly feel your judgement. I can hear the questions rolling around in your brain that you are dying to ask, but manage not to.

I can also see you biting your tongue in a desperate attempt to stop yourself from telling me exactly where I am going wrong as a parent. I see you.

Guess what? I have three other children at home who behaved exactly the way you all expect children to behave.

Children who always listened and never strayed from my side while we were out in public.

Children who smiled politely when spoken to, and who always remembered their manners. Children who would have made you very comfortable and confident in your opinions of my ability to raise them.

And then I was blessed with a fourth.

She’s a little firecracker of a child who not only marches to the beat of her own drum, but who would happily smash that drum into a million pieces to avoid falling in line with the rest of the group.

And trust me, I am regularly just as shocked and surprised by her behavior as you are.

Remember, I have three kids at home, and I am baffled on a daily basis as to how my fourth could be so different.

I didn’t eat differently while I was expecting her. I took my vitamins. She isn’t being raised in a different home or under different circumstances, so if she surprises you, you can imagine how often she surprises me.

And I fought her personality. Oh how I fought it. I was determined that somewhere in that little body there must be a complacent and easy going child, just like her older siblings. Surely it was just a phase. Maybe a bad day, or a challenging week.

There must be some explanation.

And then finally one day, while watching her as she refused to listen to something I asked her to do, I took a step back and a deep breath. Instead of getting angry and defensive at her refusal to blindly follow my rules, I looked in her eyes. I really looked. She wasn’t intentionally misbehaving.

It wasn’t her mission in life to do the exact opposite of what I asked, although it had certainly felt that way. She was my wild child.

She was simply being fiercely and unapologetically herself. Her own person. And no amount of yelling and arguing and bribing on my part was going to change that. And do you know what?

That’s pretty amazing.

In a world where society will try to tell her every single day of her entire life how she is supposed to dress, eat, talk, act, how much she should weigh, how she should do her hair, what she should want and who she should aspire to be, I am relieved to see her wildness.

It is my desperate hope that she will continue to be fierce in who is she and what she wants. I hope with all of my heart that she will balk at conventions and refuse to blindly follow societal norms. I want her to stay wild. And I know that she will go on to accomplish amazing things. She will accomplish them while being confidently and unapologetically herself. #wildchild #girls #raisinggirls #wildkids #motherhood #parenting #momlife #girlpower

It is my desperate hope that she will continue to be fierce in who is she and what she wants. I hope with all of my heart that she will balk at conventions and refuse to blindly follow societal norms.

I want her to stay wild.

And I know that she will go on to accomplish amazing things. She will accomplish them while being confidently and unapologetically herself.

But I have many years and a long road ahead of me, probably mostly uphill. And I will have to remind myself daily that while I am teaching her, I don’t need to tame her.

I will continue to take deep breaths and steps back.

And while I continue down this road, unless you are offering me a strong cup of coffee, a hug or perhaps a glass of wine, please keep your raised eyebrows and shocked expressions to a minimum. Thank you.

This post originally appeared on Is That Chocolate or Poop?

She's a little firecracker of a child who not only marches to the beat of her own drum, but who would happily smash that drum into a million pieces to avoid falling in line with the rest of the group. #wildchild #strongwilled #filterfreeparents

6 COMMENTS

  1. THIS!!! SOOO MUCH THIS!!! I have such a hard time getting ppl to UNDERSTAND that NO she is NOT doing this on purpose!! She is just her! And its AMAZING AND BEAUTIFUL AND CHALLENGING BUT I WOULD NOT for ANYTHING in this world change her!! I LOVE her just the way she is sooo much and am even envious of her and her strength and fierceness!! DO NOT try to change her or temper her, it wont go well for any of us, just work with her!! She will try for you she will accomplish great things just watch!! She is amazing and perfect just the way she is!! THANK YOU FOR THIS!!!!

  2. When my wild child was in Kindergarten the teacher pulled me aside and told me that I needed parenting classes, I told her that I had 2 at home that were doing fine but would check into it. I talked to the school counselor to see if they offered any classes and was told that there was nothing wrong with my child that it was the teacher that was the problem. From then on I would defend her to anyone who questioned why she was the way she was. My wide child is now 28 and doing great. We still don’t see eye-to-eye but I know that is just her and there is nothing that I can do to change her mind nor would I want to. I love her just the way she is.

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