Friday, December 11, 2009

Bad Parent: After A Fashion

This all started because I was doing things by the book. Doing what all the "experts" told me I should do.It was supposed to build my kids' confidence, their independence, and their decision-making skills. But lately, it's been making us look like a pack of lunatics. I let my children dress themselves. And it shows.

At first it was cute. When my twin daughters were three, I didn't flinch at the thought of prancing down the street with one child clad in rainbow tights, a fuchsia tutu, a floppy blue sun hat, and yellow rubber boots. It was the perfect compliment to her sister's look: orange shorts layered over purple floral pants, multi-colored striped shirt beneath a shiny cartoon-cat patterned vest, and a red fleece Elmer Fudd-ish hat perched on her head. Like the cherry on top of a very nutty sundae. People on the street would smile, chuckle, and comment as our cute, kaleidoscopic spectacle paraded by. To be honest, I kinda got off on the attention. I was proud of my little girls for picking out those outlandish get-ups all by themselves, so I did nothing to discourage it. I may have even made suggestions from time to time. Hey, you know what would go great with that tiger costume and those ballet slippers? The red Elmer Fudd hat!

But now, my daughters are almost six. They go to a nice little public school in a nice little neighbourhood in our nice little city. And they stick out like a pair of kooky, sparkly, technicolor thumbs. Which has me seriously questioning my decision to give them free rein in their closets, and worrying that their clothing choices reflect badly on me. Now, as I dart down the street with my colorfully clashtastic kids looking like a posse of insane clowns, I worry what other mothers think. I worry that they are judging me, whispering that only an LSD-dropping social maladjust would allow her children to go out in public dressed But I am not an LSD-dropping social maladjust. Haven't been for quite some time. In fact, I spent the last six years cultivating the attitude that I was a far better parent than those whose murmurs I'm now suddenly paranoid about: those who forbade the public wearing of tutus with rubber boots. Those who confined their kids' clothes to classic shades of tasteful, sophisticated and dull. Those whose children's outfits failed to inspire seizures in epileptic bystanders. I didn't shackle my children with the notion that clothing had to match. I didn't push my kids to blend in with the sheepish crowd. I was too busy teaching them to be creative and carefree. To be individuals. And I was pretty damn smug about it.

See, I'm no clothes horse. I'm more like a clothes donkey. And ever since the thorough heckling I endured for the trendy red crushed velvet corset/coffin-lining/pirate shirt hybrid I wore in grade ten, I've avoided taking risks with my wardrobe. My outfit options fall into three categories: black hanging-around-the-house clothes, black going-out-in-public clothes, and crazy-things-I-bought-on-impulse-but-don't-have-the-guts-to-actually-wear clothes. But I always wanted to be the girl who could pull off the plaid-mini-skirt-over- ripped-jeans look. Maybe with a purple cashmere sweater, a stripey knit scarf, peacock feather earrings, and a blue fedora. So, maybe by letting my kids continue to dress like the rainbow riot squad, I've been doing a little vicarious living. And maybe it's time I stopped. Maybe I should put the tutus and wacky hats back in the dress-up trunk where they belong. Maybe I should sit my girls down and explain the importance of not wearing multi-colored horizontal and vertical stripes with polka-dots and jumbo floral prints. Maybe I should make some room in their closets for shades of tasteful, sophisticated — and yes, even dull — before my unsuspecting daughters and their fashion non-sense become targets of other kids' cruelty and insecurity. But it might be too late for all that, as is evident by the conversations that ensue when I try to stage my little interventions.

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Comments 1-3 of 3
  • ms.makiba's Avatar
    Posted by ms.makiba Wed May 27, 2009 1:18pm PDT

    I actually believe you are a great parent. All you want is what's best for your girls and i admire that. But maybe doing it by the books was wrong, i don't think that letting your child dress their self is bad but it would have came out better if you had some type of say in it. Come on now, who cares about what other moms say? Your a good woman seems to me and as long as your girls are happy let them express themselves. They will soon catch on.

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  • JoKTM's Avatar
    Posted by JoKTM Wed May 27, 2009 2:07pm PDT

    I was a two year old toddler teacher and you should let your children pick out their own clothes. Now that they are 6 teach them how to color cordinate their outfirs. A multi colored shirt that goes with a plain tutu is just fine. Gymboree plays with patterns and color all the time.

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  • __A_YAHOO_USER__'s Avatar
    Posted by __A_YAHOO_USER__ Tue Jun 2, 2009 4:14am PDT

    ok letting them become their own is fine but my mo would do a few tricks for me when we were going through this she told me teach him/her to be neat with the clothes always pick up put away had me get 2 laundry baskets one for whites other for colored .then put out 2 outfits help the child pick

    she told me dont give them to many choices it really is overwhelming for them just a little what they didnt want was put back and each morning was most of the time peacefull ya have to try different ideas ways all depends on how you handle the child less is more

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