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MerrilyMe

When I'm not being Merry Raymond of Patch of Puddles, I'm writing as MerrilyMe. Unless I'm selling toys. Or parenting.

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What I know

School Sex Education Rage.

September 22, 2014 by Merry 16 Comments

We are a liberal household. We always have been. I grew up feeling inhibited and embarrassed about sex and bodies and I was determined my children would not feel the same. We have specifically brought them up believing they can ask any question at any time and that bodies, big, small, voluptuous or with inexplicable dangly bits are just things we all have and not the stuff of fear or anxiety.

Our conversations have, since our eldest was ready to want to know how babies arrived, included sex, love, birth, periods, erections, vaginas and penises, breasts and what you might wish, or wish not, to do with your body. We’ve talked about pleasure, pain, function and dysfunction and neutrally examined the processes and causes of everything from bumps in tummies to lumps in trousers. We’ve talked about privacy because that feels good and whether secrecy is the right thing to do if it feels bad. We’ve not shied from abortion or abuse or when you might need to discuss something that is frightening or illegal or unconventional. We’ve always openly referred to the fact that we know they may bring home a same or different sex partner and that we have no issue with that. While discreet in an ordinary ‘don’t shove it in their faces’ way, we are an openly physically affectionate and loving couple, we’ve never gone to great lengths hide sanitary protection or condoms (and we assume 2 babies born in the last 4 years means they know we still have sex) and when the older girls started periods we’ve asked them to be tidy and thoughtful but not required secrecy or used euphemistic language to evade the ears and understanding of younger siblings.

When difficult questions have come up (and it is never a great time when they do!)we tend to have a couple of responses:-

“I’m happy to tell you that but ask to chat to me in private tonight,” because generally they ask me in public to gauge how awkward it might be with a buffer of younger ears in place. Once they get that response they know it is possibly blush-worthy so they’ll find me later or when they feel ready. I keep the question in mind since there is always a reason for them asking.

My other response, such as when one of them was being teased for not knowing the significance of the number 69 in the playground is,

“I’m happy to tell you that but you might find it embarrassing or upsetting and once you know you can’t unknow it. Do you want to know?”

In the case above, the daughter in question did want to know because she had found herself in a situation where where ignorance of something no 11 year old should have to know about was making her a target. So we dealt with it.

My rule of thumb for tackling these topics is:-

  • Be factual but human too – relate it to life and experience if possible.
  • Be honest and unbiased.
  • Keep the maturity of the child in mind & relevant to the need.
  • Open door – it’s okay to revisit and ask for clarity.

Which leads me to this.

 (c) Can Stock Photo

(c) Can Stock Photo

School sex education and the absolute R.A.G.E I feel at the damage that has been done to one of my children through a ridiculous, unpersonalised, fear ridden information scheme designed to stop them from wanting to have sex.

Ever.

One of my children has gone through PSHE lessons that included a list of ten statements about sexual arousal that she had to put into order; not easy if you are still quite young at heart and it’s pretty difficult to not feel repulsed by “vagina become slippery” or “penis leaks fluid” when you are a young teen with no sexual experience. They’ve been warned so hard about the difficulty of child rearing on your career and education and the pain of birth, on the danger of STDs that far from being informed and prepared, she feels repulsed and fearful. Sex has become about danger and damage for her, while her school year is still filled with sexually active children and not a few pregnant girls.

For those who needed it, it hasn’t worked. For the one who didn’t need it, it has done harm.

I understand, I really do, that we have a country of children who need good information and good advice, who need steering and are not getting that at home. I understand I ticked the box to say she could attend these lessons. I’m not a prude and I’m happy with fact, with bold (and bald) statement and clear information about the effects of sexual interaction without precaution and consideration.

But it should not be my job now to have to talk my daughter back into the idea that sex is okay. I should not be having to tell her that it is not to be feared but to be enjoyed, that it is fun and something she will want to try in the next couple of years. I should not have to feel that if I ask her to leave the bedroom door open while her boyfriend or girlfriend is here, that I’m reinforcing an idea that what goes on behind closed doors is dirty or naughty. I should not have to worry that far from giving her a safety net she can break free from in her own time, I’m shielding her from her own inhibitions and anxieties and allowing her to develop them into deep rooted apprehensions.

And I do feel really furious to have had my role pushed outside of what it should be and beyond angry that a one sized fits all education has undone all the work I did to bring her up comfortable in sex being about her time, her body, her choice and above all, about affection and pleasure and fun – not fear and disease and consequence.

What do you think? Is it the job of a school to help teenagers become sexual beings responsibly and thoughtfully or simply to discourage them from having sex for as long as possible?

 

Filed Under: Outrage!, What I know Tagged With: parenting, preparing teens for adulthood, PSHE, school sex ed lessons, sex education, teaching children about sex, teen sex

Project Grown Up; how to prepare them for leaving home.

September 10, 2014 by Merry 8 Comments

Our eldest daughter is now heading into the delights of sixth form, which means in a very short time she will be leaving home. Watching her morph into young woman has been fascinating; really this phase of life is no different to the end of toddlerdom – at 4 you wonder how on earth they would last a day at school  but by 5  – ta da! Functioning human. And so it is with the late teens. With the right input, they blossom like a crystal kit into a young adult with a heap of skills – very few of which can be taught in school, from a book or need an exam at the end of them to prove their worth.

I read this post on Parenting in Year 12 this morning; it’s a great article with lots of useful information but I feel this journey should be less about a seamless transition into another institution, less about a parent managing a child into somewhere new, more about a young person becoming independent. Life is more than qualifications and jobs. It is about being able, being safe, being sure of yourself and about having confidence in carving out your place in life.

I don’t want my girls or boy to leave home needing to ring home and ask how to boil potatoes. I want them to have skills for work and life that aren’t contained in an A* on a certificate. And I don’t want them to have had their transition from school to university or employment to have been stage managed by me – sixth form is about beginning to take responsibility for yourself, making some mistakes, learning a few skills through trial and error but with the fall back of parents on hand if you need it.

 (c) Can Stock Photo

(c) Can Stock Photo

Here are the skills I think the parent of a Sixth Former should focus on helping them with.

It’s our job to help them:-

  1. Build a personal portfolio – use 6th form to become a rounded person with achievements and skills to discuss at interviews and on CVs. Make sure they have some skills they could use to get a job if the money runs out.
  2. Develop time management skills – learn to make a realistic revision timetable. Experience being employed alongside school commitments, hand in homework on time alongside preparing for a dancing or music exam.
  3. Learn to say no – our eldest wants to do everything. It’s no longer our job to tell her no, it is our job to encourage her to be rational about effectively completing commitments. It’s our job to help her to see the value in saying “I can’t do that at this time”.
  4. Make decisions about the future  – where I disagree with the article above is on how much of the A level to adult journey is mine to project manage. This process is a first adult responsibility – if they mess it up, perhaps they aren’t ready.
  5. Manage pressure and expectations – part of A Level seems to me about being exposed to working under great pressure and managing it. It’s a life lesson in keeping cool, keeping organised, keeping a lot of balls juggling at once. It won’t always go perfectly. Embracing that idea is fundamental to coping with life.
  6. Push boundaries – all kids are different and some are reluctant to exceed comfort zones. Sixth Form is about pushing them to try the things they find hard, be it interviews, auditions or a weekend with friends at a festival. It might even be a solo train or taxi ride.
  7. Embrace the bad stuff – if you haven’t, now is the time to have the sex, drugs and drinks conversations. It’s about telling the stories of your own unsafe drunken tube ride back across London and the day you realised you really might be pregnant. It’s about letting them know you’ve been there and they can turn to you.
  8. Suck it up – It’s not always going to go to plan and those are tough days. We are responsible for being brisk and being brutal if they are being ridiculous. It’s not my job to say “There, there, they don’t know what they are missing out on…” – it’s my job to say “What have you learned to do differently next time?”
  9. Cook, Clean, Shop, Budget – I really couldn’t boil potatoes when I left home. Late teen parenting is about the laundrette and the supermarket and about them having 7 basic meals they can cook without spending much money. It’s about saying “I’m sorry it scares you but if you want to make that trip you will have to get the train” and giving them safety tools for managing unexpected scenarios. It’s about saying “you need to save up for that”. It’s about teaching them to use the Dyson and clean a toilet.
  10. Become adult  – I’m talking about preparing them for the day there is no one to check they got home safely and no sister in the bed across the room. I’m talking about them knowing they feel awful because they haven’t eaten or they need a doctor or knowing the dose of paracetamol they can take. It’s about having the confidence to say “this was the wrong decision and I need to make a change.”

And more than anything else, parenting a teen through Sixth Form is about helping them separate from the family unit while making sure they know they will always – ALWAYS – be part of it.

Filed Under: General, What I know Tagged With: A Level, growing up, life skills, parenting, school leavers, sixth form, teenagers, university

Life Hacks: Tips for leaving the house with children.

September 8, 2014 by Merry 15 Comments

In my early years of parenting I avoided one of the major sources of parent/child stress by home educating, thereby upping the quantity of pyjamas and sofa time in our house considerably. After a brief – and almost wholly miserable – stint at trying to get out to take people to playgroup, I concluded that it had no overall benefit to my day since I required 2 hours rest, much tea and a large supply of biscuits to recover from the experience, by which time I needed to go and collect them and deal with the inevitable exhausted, hungry and over-excited children they returned to me.

The trauma over the years of trying to get out of the house to Tumbletots, Ballet, Gymnastics, Brownies, Taekwondo should have improved things but it is a matter of legend that no one ever knew where their ballet shoes were when it was time to leave the house (I often did, under the bed being a safe bet) and clean kit, leotards or rugby boots that fitted and had the right number of studs were generally pretty hard to find. My children have a high regard for my ability to read their wardrobe requirements from the inside of a smelly gym bag that is lurking in the garage.

By the time everyone decided to go to school they were, thankfully, much older and ought therefore to have acquired some skills of their very own at this chore . It’s been an education to discover quite how hard it is – at 9.30pm the night before school restarted this week, the collateral damage was a missing blazer, a missing tie, a shirt that “has always been too itchy mummy!” and trousers that turn out not to match the school uniform requirements after all.

Approx 1/10000 of the stuff required to leave the house each day. No wonder I'm grey.
Approx 1/10000 of the stuff required to leave the house each day. No wonder I’m grey.

I believe they all left with pencils for school. It’s possible they all had shoes. 😆 🙄

So here are my tips.

  1. Have one to three less children than you think you can muster out of the door. They are all twice as much work as you expected anyway so it reduces the hit to something like a doable event.
  2. Lie. Under no circumstances let them know the real last minute that you can leave to get somewhere safely. Leave a buffer of at least 15 minutes; ideally, have all the clocks in the house set fast too.
  3. Have a bag for EVERYTHING. Ballet bag, gym bag, school bag… you will, depending on the number of children, drown in bags but there is at least a small chance of finding stuff you need. If they use something for 2 different events, have two of them, one for each bag. If you can train the children to put stuff back in them after using you are a) a better person than me and b) on to a winner and (c), you might be living in Stepford, but that’s not my problem).
  4. Don’t rely on your other half for anything. They don’t remember what you tell them, recall details like who does tap dancing when, or realise that shoes with metal bits on are required for the aforementioned activity. Have a very accurately annotated calender (with fake leaving times) by the door.
  5. Tell your children – and follow it through – that if they don’t know where their stuff is at leaving time, they have to leave anyway and dance in bare feet/not hand in homework/do taekwondo in their ordinary clothes. This works pretty well for school or anything that involves potential detentions. And it’s a good life lesson anyway. Suck it up.
  6. Don’t need a lie in. Ever.
  7. Don’t go away ever and leave any form of school or activities run to them or their dad. Any system you have created will breakdown irretrievably. There will not be a ballet shoe left in the house by the time you come back.
  8. Don’t tidy up. Obviously there is a critical mass involved here but if you make them put away their blazer, school bag or glasses every night, you greatly up the chances of them randomly stashing it somewhere they can’t remember tomorrow. It’s painful but the newel post and a pile of shoes at the bottom of the stairs is the only way.
  9. There used to be a lot of shouting in the car on the way to school when I was a kid. I don’t shout (much). I sit in stony, furious silence for about 5 minutes and then attempt to do a disconcerting switch to cheerful afterwards. Apparently far scarier and keeps them on their toes 😉
  10. Establish a wishlist pad. If something is too small, broken, missing or wrong, they can write a request for a new one on the pad. Since 98.3%* of all late leaving scenarios are caused by “stuff”, this allows you to only take responsibility for it if you have written proof of a request for replacement. Also, make them buy things they lose. It’s amazing how quickly they learn to take more care of their stuff.

On the plus side, years of nagging, shrieking and enforcing an element of taking responsibility for themselves has genuinely paid off; these days the girls are really pretty good at getting out of the house on time. Which makes it all the more embarrassing that it is often me charging about looking for my keys, purse and shoes….

What are your tips for leaving the house on time and with all the required stuff? Real or ridiculous accepted in equal measure 😉

*May not have been accurately researched.

Filed Under: Life Hacks, What I know Tagged With: kids, leaving the house, organisation, organising children, school run

Top 10 reasons to have lots of children…

September 5, 2014 by Merry 6 Comments

People ask me quite a lot why I didn’t stop after one or two children. The queries are endless; do I have a  TV (yes, but seriously, there is never anything on…) or did I keep trying for a boy (no!) and of course, am I religious or a glutton for punishment and have I definitely stopped now? (YES!) From horror at the cost or invasion in my life to surprise and envy, I get them all.

To be honest though, there wasn’t much of a plan, other than to be like Joey Maynard of the Chalet School .By the time I thought about it, it was too late to alter the situation. 🙄  If I’d known, I might not have timed them so A Level, AS Levels and GCSEs will all happen at once in 2 years time, but it’s too late now.

I asked the troops and here are the reasons they thought it was okay for us to have 6 kids. (Max added the child benefit as a plus, but I’m not convinced that one adds up as a plus overall!)

Making me look like Parent of the Year since 1998.
Making me look like Parent of the Year since 1998.

Ten: It’s completely brilliant training for being a hostage negotiator as a career when they’re all grown up.

Nine: It takes a very few Christmases before your home is completely filled with every toy in every possible permutation.

Eight: You never (ever) need to worry about what to do with spare cash.

Seven: You can totally justify rebuilding your My Little Pony collection from eBay.

Six: There is absolutely no reason at all to miss a Peppa Pig episode. You WILL see them all.

Five: Your chances of getting a cup of tea brought to you in the morning greatly increase.

Four: At some point you will find yourself with footage to send in to You’ve Been Framed!

Three: The ‘Hunt the Remote Control’ fun never ends.

Two: There are always people to tidy up the mess they create. (I see a flaw in that though, tbh…)

One: (As contributed by Maddy)… more chances of getting a nice one!

And of course the bonus is that you’ll always have something to blog about. What’s your best reason for having kids?

 

Filed Under: What I know Tagged With: larger families, parenting, top ten

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