That cute face
is why I got into a fight at the mall. And yes, as his shirt indicates, he was actually “dipped in
handsome sauce”.
I took my three youngest kids for lunch at the food court in the local mall the other day. My toddler had
a meltdown and was doing the high-pitched scream. Yeah, you know the sound.
As I’m trying to manage my stressful moment, an elderly woman looked over at us and shook her head
in disgust. I had to take her to task on it because I hate passive aggressive communication. I wanted her
to say the words – that my kid was out of control and I was a crappy parent. I wanted her to stand
by her dirty looks. When I asked her why she was shaking her head, she stood by them alright, informing me
that I should do a better job of “training” him. I almost had a temper tantrum myself at that
point.
I suggested that if she found it too noisy, perhaps a café rather than a mall food court might better
suit. Another suggestion I offered was that she come to my house and reform my entire collection of unruly
children, all the while giving me some parenting lessons. Then I asked her to consider that next time she
sees an exhausted mother struggling, why not offer to give her a hand? Mrs. McJudgerson was all criticism
with nothing helpful to offer.
When the spectacle came to an end, another elderly woman made her way over to us and supported me, reminding
me that people like that are not worth a second thought. Her support turned my anger into sadness. My lip
began to quiver, then came a quiet tear and then another.
Why was I so sad? I was confused myself at first.
I was sad because this woman is the reason mamas worry that we are doing a bad job. She is the reason mamas
feel too overwhelmed to take their three small children on an outing. She is the reason mamas get trapped
at home, socially isolated – because they are afraid of going out there and being judged.
I was also upset because I’m worried about this toddler of mine. His tantrums are outrageous because
his language is so delayed. He’s almost two years old and has no words. I’m scared that I’m
about to travel down the autism road for a second time – a trip I really didn’t want to have
to take. It felt like this woman in the food court was rubbing my face in it.
I took comfort in a couple of things. First, that karma has a way of repaying debt. Second, I am eternally
grateful that she is not my mother-in-law. Imagine being related to that parenting expert!
What would your reaction have been?
Veteran
mother, Julie Cole has six young children in her charge and is the co-founder of Mabel's
Labels. With humour, Julie blogs about life in a family of eight, including honesty about cereal for dinner
and monstrous carpool schedules. www.mabel.ca
Not to be reprinted without written permission.