Every once in a long while, an email comes along that is a keeper. So I print it out, and then it gets consumed by the gnashing teeth of the “To Do” piles scattered around in various places in my house…maybe to never see the light of day again.
So selfishly, I’ve decided to use this blog for sharing (and thereby archiving) those good nuggets of wisdom that come along occasionally. I like this one…as I definitely sometimes think I need to be a meaner Mom. In fact, I ran into one of my friends the other day at work who had read Elaine’s blog about controlling our kid’s cell phone use. After reading this blog, she came home and instituted some new rules – resulting in a lot of sobbing on her daughter’s part. And as we know, it is never easy to be tough and cause familial trauma, but I could tell that my friend was feeling good about playing the role of “Mean Mom.”
Mean Moms
Someday when my children are old enough to understand the logic that motivates a parent, I will tell them, as my Mean Mom told me: I loved you enough…to ask where you were going, with whom, and what time you would be home. I loved you enough to be silent and let you discover that your new best friend was a creep. I loved you enough to make you go pay for the bubble gum you had taken and tell the clerk, “I stole this yesterday and want to pay for it.” I loved you enough to stand over you for two hours while you cleaned your room, a job that should have taken 15 minutes. I loved you enough to let you see anger, disappointment, and tears in my eyes. Children must learn that their parents aren’t perfect. I loved you enough to let you assume the responsibility for your actions even when the penalties were so harsh they almost broke my heart. But most of all, I loved you enough…to say NO when I knew you would hate me for it.
Those were the most difficult battles of all. I’m glad I won them, because in the end you won, too. And someday when your children are old enough to understand the logic that motivates parents, you will tell them.
Was your Mom Mean? I know mine was. We had the meanest mother in the whole world! While other kids ate candy for breakfast, we had to have cereal, eggs and toast. When others had a Pepsi and a Twinkie for lunch, we had to eat sandwiches. And you can guess our mother fixed us a dinner that was different from what other kids had too.
Mother insisted on knowing where we were at all times. You’d think we were convicts in a prison. She had to know who our friends were, and what we were doing with them. She insisted that if we said we would be gone for an hour, we would be gone for an hour or less.
We were ashamed to admit it, but she had the nerve to break the Child Labor Laws by making us work. We had to wash the dishes, make the beds, learn to cook, vacuum the floor, do laundry, empty the trash and all sorts of cruel jobs. I think she would lie awake at night thinking of more things for us to do.
She always insisted on us telling the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. By the time we were teenagers, she could read our minds and had eyes in the back of her head. Then, life was really tough!
Mother wouldn’t let our friends just honk the horn when they drove up. They had to come up to the door so she could meet them. While everyone else could date when they were 12 or 13, we had to wait until we were 16.
Because of our mother we missed out on lots of things other kids experienced. None of us have ever been caught shoplifting, vandalizing other’s property or ever arrested for any crime. It was all her fault.
Now that we have left home, we are all educated, honest adults. We are doing our best to be mean parents just like Mom was.
I think that is what’s wrong with the world today. It just doesn’t have enough mean Moms!



6-12-2008 09:56:31
How timely! My daughter is going to a party on Friday night and I was wavering over my practice of calling the host’s parents (whom I don’t know) in advance and ensuring they’d be around for the party. She HATES that I do this. I also feel kind of stupid b/c each time the parent responds, “Yes, of course, I will be there!” My idea was to institute this double-check now with an eye toward a few years down the road when it’s not always a given parents will be around.
So, with pride, I renew my membership in the Mean Moms club and will call tonight!