Speed-Round Sunday: Terrible Parenting Advice - podcast episode cover

Speed-Round Sunday: Terrible Parenting Advice

Jun 25, 20238 min
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Episode description

On Speed-Round Sunday, we share a mini episode from our past for your weekend listening pleasure.

Parents (and therapists) from past generations have passed on some truly crummy wisdom. We've totally gotten over resenting them for it, sure!

Transcript

Welcome to speed Round Sunday on the Parenting Roundabout podcast, where we share a mini episode from our past for your weekend listening pleasure. We'll be back tomorrow with a brand new episode. We wanted to talk to today on our speed Round about bad parenting advice. So, you know, maybe it's because you got it. Maybe you got advice from someone who was a generation or two removed from their child wearing days and it wasn't very good. Or have you

ever have you ever given bad parenting advice? Isn't that what we do here every week? Professional? Yeah, we're not going to admit to that. But anyway, maybe you can share something that you've heard recently or some bad advice you did receive, either back in the day or recently. I don't know, Terry, have you gotten at any point that you want to share. When I first adopted my kids, we got absolutely no advice or support from our adoption agency at all. We adopted two kids from Eastern Europe.

Nobody knew anything at that point. All the research on adopting kids from Eastern Europe was done with my generation of kids. So now I find things online that have super super good advice that nobody knew to give. Then it's like I came upon an article the other day, and you know, I've shared it with my daughter, and it's like, if I had known this stuff, everything would have been different. So pretty much, ever, all of the advice I was given was bad. You know, I still look back

and resent all the advice that was basically, your kids have disabilities. They're never going to amount to anything. The sooner you accept that, the better. If you don't accept that you were unrealistic. Mom is in denial, you know. And it's like, well, to some extent, yeah, that's true. But on the other who ever tell any other parent, hey, expect the worst for your kid. Start right now, then you won't be disappointed. And yet lots of kids don't turn out too great for no

good reason, but you don't start with that. And lots of kids who are who are you're told that they're not going to turn out great, don't turn out but even if they but even if they don't, at least you start with hope. Yeah, you don't. Nobody else gets told you know

what, kids not going to mount to anything. Don't don't get your hopes of everybody's told, hey, you know, hope for the best, and let's see what happens kids with At least my generation of parents of kids with special needs were told, you know, the sooner you completely accept that your life is ruined, thanks your things. So now you know all the all the general you know, talk of the disability community has parenting of children's disability

community has changed a lot and has become a lot more upbeat. I feel. Whether it's more realistic or not, I don't know, but it's a lot more pleasant to Yeah, I don't know, but I'm sure. I'm sure there are still therapists in schools today and teachers in schools today going that mom, yeah, just want accept how limited her child is. Yea. So maybe that was good advice and I should have taken it. I don't know. There were days and then there were days, but I hated that

advice and I still do. Well. I hated first of all, just being asked if my child was sleeping through the night, because like, if they are, then we have nothing to talk about. If they're not, I also don't want to talk about. And then as soon as someone will find out, yeah, no, they're not sleeping through the night, Well, are you breastfeeding. Yes, oh, well you should give them formula or you should give them cereal and then they'll sleep. If you were giving

them formula, they would have told you to do breastfeeding. Yeah, like, are you kidding me? No, Like, this is not why my kid is not sleeping, And even if it was, then I'm going to suck it up for a while. And you know, I don't know it just it was just. I also hated hearing like it'll get better soon because it's not helpful. That is so not helpful, Like, yeah, maybe it will, but I can't see past, you know, a day. I don't. I'm not looking as to what's going to happen in a month

from now or three months or a year. Like that is way too hard. Yeah. Yeah. In general, things when your kids are little things that have long term or looking long term or annoying, it's like, can I just get there to day? Please? Yeah? Yeah, well I can quite definitively say that the worst advice I ever received was from my mother who suggested I move my sleeping baby. Oh no, oh, yeah, he couldn't possibly have his naps in his car seat. He had to be

taken out of the car seat and put into his crib. And I was so sleep deprived and so tired and just a mess that I, you know, blindly took third and that just set the wheels in motion for the next two years. Have you are you just her silently? I just talked about it on this podcast Nobody tell Nichols Mom, worst advice ever. Yeah,

that's like one never. I was like vulnerable and tired and okay, mom, it was like, I don't know, one in the morning or something crazy because he hadn't been sleeping, and I took him for a drive in the car seat and he fell asleep, and I brought him in the house and and I think I was crying by that point too, And I remember calling her up and oh, you know, finally he's asleep, and I'm so tired and I can't beat this. And then well, you've got to

take him out of that car seat. You can't leave him in there. Now that he's finally asleep, you have to take him out, put him in his bed. Yeah. The rest is history. So as you can tell, there's a certain scheme with my responses in this podcast. You know

what I should have said earlier. The worst piece of advice I got was when my son, my son toilet trained fairly late, and when he was I don't know, maybe for his occupational therapist told me that I was infantilizing him by not forcing him to do it, and that I should use suppositories. And she was disgusted with me that I would not do this, that I would not force him, and I said, you know, he's really not ready. He doesn't feel when he has to go. There's no way

this is going to work. And I held my ground despite all the eye rolls and the you know, charges of infantilizing him. And when he was ready, he trained in a day. You know, it was like that he was dry all night. Everything was great. Just it's like, if you wait, this is my good advice for people, wait till they're ready, you will save yourself a lot of trouble. But I have wanted so many times. I still know that occupational therapist, and I talk to her

every now and then. I keep wanting to say I was writing you wrong. For the record, well, we certainly have a lot to say about these topics. You can tell we've brushed it all enough and we're not resenting it at all. We're very well found. We buried it, buried it

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