Nothing annoys me more than the mother (or grandmother) of a girl that looks at me and says with pity in her eyes.. "ohhh my" after seeing my active son at play. In this case, it was after a gymnastics class for 2 and 3 year boys and girls.
I wish I could have said this to her face...
Yes, my son is active. He's a typical 2 year old boy. Your daughter happens to like to walk quietly on the balance beam while my son likes to run, jump and roll around. He isn't hurting anyone or causing trouble.. this is just how he learns and explores. Please don't pity me or make it seem like there's something wrong. Because there isn't. This is the life of being a boy's mom and I'm perfectly fine with it.
Vent over.
Re: Vent: Some moms of girls don't get it
Kelly, Mom to Christopher Shannon 9.27.06, Catherine Quinn 2.24.09, Trey Barton lost on 12.28.09, Therese Barton lost on 6.10.10, Joseph Sullivan 7.23.11, and our latest, Victoria Maren 11.15.12
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I'm afraid I'm one of those moms that doesn't get it.
A very good friend of ours has two boys ages 8 and 6 and it was so startling and nerve wracking for us at a recent birthday party. You'd think I'd be used to it because I have 3 younger brothers.
The longer I'm a mother the more aware I am of how different boys and girls are....and I'm slightly scared sh1tless since I'm going to have one ; ) Sorry, hope that doesn't put me in the category you speak of.
I have a friend with a VERY active 4 year old and all of her friends had girls when she had her son and for a long time she was really stressed about his development because she was comparing him to girls who, while not always calm and easy, are just a little different. Finally when he started going to school she realized there wasn't anything wrong, he was just being a boy.
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ditto. I LOVE that my girls give the little boys a run for their money. lol
I don't think girls and boys are all that different. Children in general are just different. Some are quiet and some aren't.
This. Being a boy or being a girl doesn't dictate activity level. There are plenty of VERY active little girls and very quiet little boys. Categorizing little girls as quiet and obedient and boys as "ruff and tumble" is stereotypical, in my opinion.
I'm going to have to disagree with you to some extent. Boys and girls ARE different. I didn't think so, I thought it was all societal and stereotyping, but since becoming a parent I have come to accept that in nature vs. nurture a lot of the time nature wins.
There are a lot of things my sons do that my sister and I never did as children. Things that my husband and I haven't taught him. Things to which he is just instinctively drawn. It isn't bad. It is just different.
I don't at all think that OP is trying to say that all girls are sugar and spice and a cake walk. Nor that some boys aren't shy and less gregarious. Every child can have traits from both ends of the spectrum. But, more often than not, boys and girls ARE different. And that's totally cool.
This is all based on ancetote. Simply because in your own personal experience, or because you know of an instance or two where this happens to be the case, doesn't mean all boys and girls are different when it comes to behavior. In addition, if you want to dicuss nature vs. nurture, then consider that the "nature" of a lot of girls is to be active and the nature of a lot of boys is to be quiet and parents try to "nurture" them in the opposite direction. I'm not saying that there aren't psychological and physiological differences in boys and girls - there certainly are - however, making gross generalizations based on personal experience isn't the postion to take in this sort of dicussion.
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I couldn't agree more. Well said! Incidentally, my mom never thought so until my little brother was born. She said boys even make different sounds as newborns, which I've found to be true as well. After raising two girls and having lots of nieces around, she was pretty shocked by my brother's inherent differences.
Yep, this is Anna. She gives any toddler around her age a run for their money. And we are pretty calm people, so we have no idea where she got it from!
Because we're fancy like that.
I'm not saying girls are always quiet and sweet and boys are always busy and crazy.
I'm saying that if you are the mother of a quieter girl (or boy) and have never mothered a BUSY toddler boy (or girl).. don't give me a look like I have something to be ashamed about... until you have a very normal, active kid and have walked in my shoes.
(And, in my experience in all the classes I have attended with my DS, it's the boys that are usually running around like lunatics while the girls are well behaved...)
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I has to explain that this is normal to a friend of mine she and her son came over for a playdate and she kept apologizing for him and I told he he's just a happy normal little boy no worries. She only has a sister so she hasn't been exposed to this.
I don't think much about it when I see this and I certainly don't comment on it, I grew up with 2 older brothers so I'm used to it I guess.
I know I'm going to be constantly telling myself 'this is normal' and alternately praying he's not judged and being furious if someone does. But ultimately - lots of people are just douches. We went to our first music class and they handed Daniel two of those sticks. He came over to me and touched them to the wall and smiled. Then another kid (a little older) took his and started banging them on the wall. And his father immediately said "that's because he saw HIM do it". Right, like a child would never think of tapping sticks on the wall all on his own. Hows about we each say 'oh, no not on the wall' or just STFU?
OP-Betsy was crazy at gymnastics class at almost 3. She wouldn't sit still or follow the directions from the teacher. I was so tired from chasing her after each class.
But, I am probably one of those moms you are talking about. As a mom of girls, one thing I don't like is when the moms of boys use the fact that they are boys to explain their naughty behavior instead of taking action.
Example:
We were outside waiting for music class to start and one little boy starts picking up the fruit that has fallen off the tree and throwing it. It is rotten dirty fruit and the dad looks at me and says, "sorry, he's just such a boy," as his kid keeps throwing fruit, sometimes at other kids and he does nothing to correct the behavior.
Yeah, he got the side-eye for that as I told Carly not to throw fruit.
Well, I think most of what we all speak of here is anecdotal.
I interpreted this post to be about how when mothers of boys are out with mothers of girls, who either don't know many other children or only have friends with other daughters, sometimes seem surprised when they are around little boys. Perhaps their daughters (and the other girls they know) are less active, less loud, more obedient, whatever but these mothers can sometimes give looks at mothers of boys like we somehow aren't in control of our sons or aren't disciplining them properly. I am all about disciplining my son and teaching what is proper behavior in different environments. I don't let him run around like a crazy person in a restaurant or at church. But when he is in a tumbling class where he is supposed to be getting all his energy out and is not listening to the teacher and is running around screaming "Hi, Harry!" at his best friend while the moms of daughters, who are actively listening to the teacher stare at us, I'm shouldn't need to feel embarrassed. That is what little boys need to do sometimes.
I'm not saying all little girls listen or don't act out or whatever. But almost all my friends have sons and every parent talks about how differently our sons behave in group settings than little girls. I think what the OP's point was, and I agree with her, is that mom's of boys shouldn't feel embarrassed by their son's behavior just because it may be different and more active crazy than some girl's.
Dude, that's just bad parenting. My son loves to throw stuff, but we have limits.