Arab Times

Is it okay to parent other people’s children?

Kids behaving badly during holidays British Council

- By Leanne Italie

the toddler who always bites. She’s the 6-year-old drama queen prone to “it’s mine” fits and hairpullin­g. The problem, for you anyway, is they belong to your best friend, your neighbor or your exceedingl­y lenient big sister.

With the holidays comes togetherne­ss, sometimes thrust upon us. And with togetherne­ss, especially the obligatory kind, comes major stress — for you and your kids. But friction over the offspring of loved ones strikes all yearround, leading the grown-ups to ponder whether their adult relationsh­ips are worth it.

Julie Klam, a Manhattan mom and author of the new book “Friendkeep­ing,” believes middle ground is possible.

“Do the best you can to see them without their children, but when they are around, take the anthropolo­gist’s point of view: ‘Hmm, that’s interestin­g that the kid is standing on a table throwing cheese at the wall,’ instead of getting wound up in it,” she said.

Troubled

Looking for the worst in other people’s kids, and by associatio­n other people’s parenting prowess, is a road to nowhere, which may be where you land when things go dangerousl­y wrong. But seriously troubled is different than the day-to-day grind of ill-mannered, badtempere­d kids and their parents who stand around and let it happen, by design or otherwise.

“If you’re in your head keeping score of how rude they are, or whatever the things are that happen, it makes it much worse,” said Klam, who has a 10-yearold daughter.

Klam found herself putting distance between her and a mom friend when the kids were about 18 months old.

“She just never limited her kid’s physical thing, and it was a lot of the kind parenting of ‘Use your words,’ and the kid was flinging books really hard at my kid. My way is pick ‘em up and take ‘em out of there. We could not hang out with the kids together at all.”

Deciding when to cut and run for the sake of your own sanity and the wellbeing of your children obviously depends on how deep the adult friendship­s go or how much the kin ties matter. And sometimes, it’s not easy making a clean break even with the merest of mommy acquaintan­ces because of proximity. They’re in the park, at the play group, live next door.

Fatal

Either way, before you take the fatal step of severing ties, “Stop and try to figure out how much of this has to do with you and how much has to do with them,” Klam suggested.

And keep in mind, she urged, that a seemingly out-of-control 3-year-old may mature into an angelic 8.

Anastasia Gavalas, a family coach, educationa­l consultant and mom of five in Bridgehamp­ton, dares cross the line some parents will not trod upon: disciplini­ng other people’s children.

Her’s is the big, fun house with the pool, the spacious backyard and the recreation­al basement. She gets a lot of young visitors, including two teen boys — one a relative and one a friend — who were instrument­al in destroying her $3,000 leather couch during a party about a year ago.

“To me it wasn’t about yelling and saying what did you do to my couch,” she said. “It was more about if you are going to come here you need to respect my things and that’s it, whether you’re 5 years old or 15 years old or 50 years old, so it was more about a teaching opportunit­y.”

Among her parent-clients, broken ties due to the kids bubble up frequently: “I hear it a lot. I hear the, ‘My sister told me that my child isn’t smart so I’m not talking to her. My friend told me that my son is a brat so I’m not hanging out with her anymore.’”

Outreach

Leslie Sexer, director of clinical and outreach services for Family Centers, a nonprofit provider of counseling and other services in Fairfield County, Conn., said holiday gatherings unravel the most stoic adults, so take that into considerat­ion with kids.

“If you feel that you must step in to correct a behavior, be helpful and kind and do not shame, criticize or judge,” she said. “Not all kids are wired to handle large gatherings well, or they may have ongoing issues that interfere with the behavior you expect.” (AP)

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 ??  ?? This book cover image released by Riverhead shows ‘Friendkeep­ing: A Field Guide to the People You Love, Hate, and Can’t Live Without’, by
Julie Klam. (AP)
This book cover image released by Riverhead shows ‘Friendkeep­ing: A Field Guide to the People You Love, Hate, and Can’t Live Without’, by Julie Klam. (AP)

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