Little boy children.
June 18, 2009 at 1:28 pm | In Mamahood | 6 CommentsTags: Mamahood
I like love having a little boy. I’m not sure where this post is coming from, but I think it stems from a conversation I had with an acquaintance recently. This person had a little girl and has another (unknown gender as of yet) baby on the way. She mentioned that when she found out she was having a little girl, she cried a few tears of relief because the thought of having a little boy scared her very, very much. I thought this was interesting and I asked her to explain. She stated that she was such a girly girl herself that she would be unsure of how to relate to a little boy. She also believed she would not have as much fun with a little boy because while she would want to color and paint with her child, a little boy would assuredly want to spend most of the time ripping the paper to shreds. Having a little boy, I think this might be very true. Her message was clear, though. How in the hell could I live with something so wild? And perhaps the more subtle statement: How will I control that thing?
It was an interesting conversation – one that made me reflect upon my role as the mother of a son. I have little reference in terms of what to expect from little boy and little girl children. I was simply never around children of either variety growing up. My friends didn’t have little kids, relatives didn’t have little kids, neighbors did not have little kids. Everything I know about little boys I am learning in the moment as I raise Benjamin.
But there are some things that I am observing. Things that make me take pause and, on my more critical days, feel frustrating and just a touch unfair. I think that little boys, and by extension the mothers of said little boys, are judged by a much harsher, much less lenient measure than little girls (and little girl’s mamas). When my son is in public and gets a little loud and a little antsy and a little, errr, runny (my newly created one-word term designed to encapsulate that inability of a toddler child to stand. still. ever.), he is looked at in a much different way than when a little girl gets loud and antsy and runny. I’ve seen it. I’ve seen more of a tendency toward furrowed brows and pursed lips and those obvious (and sometimes exaggerated) glances from the child to me to the child and then back to me, as if I am somehow able to control the whirling vortex before me. I can, to some extent, but no more than any other parent of a toddler is able to do. It’s as if people want to say, “Look we all know that boys will be boys, but why do they have to be such animals?” I think people are just less patient around little boys. I don’t know if it says something about how we view males, how we view females, or both. If the lesson to be learned is that a toddler acting out is neither tolerable nor acceptable, but it is worse from a boy, what is this teaching our boys? That we don’t really want you to indulge yourself in the fullest range of your “self” – your highs and your lows and your joy and your vitality and your frustration and your anger? Because that’s what it feels like to me. I think it is viewed as somehow threatening – something to be carefully controlled - and the end result is that, from a very early age, we encourage our boys to put a damper on their outward expression of energy and emotion.
I think we worry a lot about the socialization of young girls in this country. As we should. They are sexualized and adultified at younger and younger ages. They are certainly not the “weaker sex,” but there are differences in socialization, in biology and certainly in the distribution of power that can put them at a disadvantage when growing up. I appreciate this. I was a girl, then an adolescent female, and now an adult woman. I also consider myself a feminist, and have for many, many years. But having a little boy, indeed even preparing for his birth upon finding out I was having a boy, forced me to really change my feminist mindset. My understanding of feminism has been in constant flux throughout my life. As I gained new insights, my understanding would change and I would recreate a new, more inclusive definition for myself. And I was never a separatist feminist to begin with. I like men and their contributions to the world. I also see areas for much-needed improvement. But we sell our boys short when we make the assumption that socialization into gender roles negatively impacts ONLY the young girls. In the tamping down of that brilliant display of emotion and passion in our young boys, we are doing them a great disservice.
My son is this remarkable little character. He is silly and funny and happy. And then, as if turning on a dime, he is angry and frustrated and stubborn. Of course he is. He is a toddler. But he is also a human and such is the nature of humanity. We are complex. We have mood swings. If left to flourish, we can love to great depths, live to great heights and bask in the joy of being, moving, experiencing and connecting to other people. Except, of course, that we don’t really encourage this in our boys, and certainly not in our men. It’s a shame, really.
So, I’ve made a decision. It is not appropriate to scream in a post office, and I’ll gladly step in and tone it down a notch there because I do believe that to be responsible parenting. It is also not appropriate to run in circles around other patrons’ tables in a restaurant and I’ll be more than happy to take the child outside for a much needed moment of calming down. You get the idea. But if you see us in the park and my son is running and screaming and pounding on the metal benches by the ball field and his outward display of exuberance bothers you, please just keep on walking by and let us enjoy ourselves. If my son cries, I will pat down his tears, but I’ll let him cry. If he laughs, I’ll laugh with him. And when he says I love you and wants a kiss, you’d better believe I’ll be the first to drop to my knees and indulge in a wonderful moment. Or get on my tippy toes and look skyward, as I have a feeling this one is gonna be a tall drink of water in his teens.
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yay for mom’s of boys!! I’m actually more scared of having girls!! lol
Comment by The Informal Matriarch — June 18, 2009 #
I think I assumed I was going to have a girl because karma would want to pay me back for my petulant angst.
Comment by MamaPenguin — June 25, 2009 #
What drives me nuts is that everything Kalan does that is “boyish” everyone points out what a little boy he is. When a little girl does it its just a developmental stage. Some goes with “girlish” behavior. A little girl does it and she’s girly, but a little boy does it and its just developmental. It drives me nuts. I don’t really see how toddler boys or girls are any different. Some are quiet, some are crazy, some are sensitive, some are pushy. I really don’t think it has anything to do with gender. Ok that’s it. Obviously I’ve been confronted with the same issue lately.
Comment by brynn — June 19, 2009 #
That’s interesting. I hear a lot of the “boys will be boys” comments when Ben does something, but I agree that not everything seems inherently boyish. I mean, when he picks up a toy and flings it across the room, I think less “Oh, what a boy thing to do” and more “Oh crap, did he see me toss a book in frustration last week and learn from my bad example.”
Comment by MamaPenguin — June 25, 2009 #
This is an interesting post. I had two little boys before I had a girl, and I think it’s actually a matter of perception, because I’d say that people, at least in my neck of the woods, are actually as critical of little girls making noise or running about. And I think when it’s our particular child, boy or girl, we notice the disapprobation far more than we’d notice it for another child.
However, I do remember the pity I got sometimes when I had the two boys. People seemed to think it was just so sad that I didn’t have a little girl to dress up (what the heck?) and that my hands were so full. Well, it’s not like they’re less full now that I have a daughter! I think toddler boys often do have more energy than toddler girls, but honestly, that’s OK. All children are challenging in different ways.
The boys/energy issue becomes a bigger deal when they start school. We expect kids to sit down quietly for most of the day, and for some kids (girls and boys, but more often boys) this is physically challenging and can be very hard to maintain.
Good for you, and enjoy your little guy and his exuberance!
Comment by Kristen — June 23, 2009 #
I do wonder if there are differences in certain areas. I get the sense that, in my little hamlet, little girls are prized in a different way than little boys here. It is just my unadulterated and anecdotally-based suspicion, but I think it stems from living among highly educated women with liberal/feminist leanings. Kind of a “Here is me and here is my little mini-me that will grow to be a whatever she wants to be. Girl power!” In other areas that I have lived, however, I would say that the boy children seemed to be the more prized gender and there was a real sense of pride when a little boy would act in miniature “manlike” ways. So perhaps my observations are, to some extent, a cultural artifact of my place of residence. Food for thought.
Comment by MamaPenguin — June 25, 2009 #