Henrietta the Hedgehog
Sometimes, I need the help of a child psychologist.
Sometimes, I need the help of a child psychologist.
Luckily, I have one working for me. She’s an intern who took
the job because she needed the job, not because it is going to be some
prerequisite to a PR or marketing career.
We hired her because she blew us away in the interview process and she
hasn’t disappointed since.
So in addition to having someone to do our crappy jobs here
at work, I have access to someone who is studying the behavior of children and
can be of help with advice on raising two toddlers. As most of you know, my
answer to everything is to Google it. But some questions go beyond “How do I
take a splinter out? or “What are these red splotchy things behind my son’s
ears?” and require a professional
opinion.
And boy, do I have questions. For example, do I tell my
daughter her artwork sucks, or do I pretend like she is the best at everything
she does?
Sydney has a recent fascination with drawing and painting.
I’m not sure her artwork is good even for a 3 year old. But if I tell her she
needs to work on it, that could be really discouraging. If I tell her it is
fantastic, will she ever work to get better?
For now, I play it safe and say something along the lines
of, “Wow, that is very interesting.”
And really, when you are talking about art, could you be
wrong? There is a whole genre of art – abstract – that makes no sense at all. I
could drink two cases of beer on a Saturday night and puke on a canvas and
someone would probably pay me $100 for my incredible abstract work of art.
But it gets fishier with other things. Sydney took a
tumbling class this year. She is as athletic as the Big Bang’s Sheldon Cooper.
I practiced with her, but she just can’t seem to grasp even the simplest of
tumbling exercises. Her bear crawl becomes a butt crawl. Her crab walk becomes
an exercise in pushing her stomach across the floor. Her somersaults have you
fearing for her life.
I’m convinced, at 3 years old, this child will never be an
athlete. I want to be encouraging. I want her to keep trying. But I feel like oohing and aahhing at
everything she does and telling her how great she is might lead to
self-perception problems when she gets older.
I’ve yet to ask Sara, the child psychologist, about that
question, but I did ask her the other day what to do about a child who uses a
stuffed animal as a security blanket.
Sydney’s hedgehog, Henrietta, must go everywhere she goes.
She cannot go to sleep or to day care without Henrietta. It has gotten to the
point that when we head to the grocery, Henrietta buckles in the cart.
This can be a massive problem if “Henri,” as she calls her,
gets lost. It results in massive, uncontrollable sobbing, and resistance to
doing anything in life until Henrietta is by her side. So, should she have to
go to bed while Henri is missing, there is no going to bed. We have to search
the house high and low while she loudly sobs to the point of heaving.
Our previous day care provider once drove Henri to our house
at 9 p.m. because Sydney had left her there that day. When we said , “You don’t
have to do that,” her reply was. “Oh yes I do, because I know from experience
how miserable your night will be if she is not there.”
We lost Henri once while running errands. She is likely in a
Hyde Park parking lot as we speak. My wife thought she would be clever and went
to Ikea and bought seven identical hedgehogs. It worked! Brilliant move.
But not for long. After series of lost and founds, Sydney
now realizes she has three hedgehogs. And she actually has a favorite – the one
that feels the fluffiest. If you try to substitute one of the others, you get
the sobbing. She actually knows the difference.
The other day, she dropped Sydney off at day care and by the
time she had arrived at work five minutes later, she had a call waiting from
her from the day care provider. Heni was gone! We didn’t know it at the time,
but she was sitting on the floor of our garage, the victim of a careless child
and a too-busy-in-the-morning daddy.
When Brooke tried to talk some sense into Sydney, she was
met with sobbing to the point of almost throwing up. The girl was in a complete
melt down and on the verge of physical collapse. Luckily, Brooke keeps a brand new “fluffy” emergency
Henri in the car for just such occasions and was able to drive the few blocks
to the day care provider’s house and save the day before the opening bell rang
at her school.
Now, you can imagine how this goes over with me. There is no
way I am driving back to day care after getting to work because of a stuffed
animal. When it is time to go to bed, I am not crawling under every couch and
chair in the house looking for a hedgehog.
My solution is, if she loses it, she lives with it. She will
cry for a couple of days – cry massively – but then we will be done with this.
Of course, my wife thinks this is barbaric.
So I ask the child psychologist.
She is more on my wife’s side. Tell her that just like
Sydney needs some alone time from her brother, Henri needs some alone time from
Sydney. Or, tell her that she won’t be able to take Henri to pre-school with
her and, since this is something Sydney is really looking forward to, she needs
to practice being without Henri.
I guess these are the humane ways of doing things.
This is definitely not the way my learn-by-hard-knocks dad
would have handled things, but he never had access to a child psychologist.
Or patience.
Maybe I am getting soft in old age. Or my kids have melted
my hardened heart. I’ll give these new-fangled approaches a try. I’ll show
everyone I’m no Archie Bunker.
My kids will be happy, my wife will be happy, even Sara the
intern will be happy.
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