Other parents suck
I know we're all doing the best we can to raise our kids. But some of you guys are really terrible at this
TOPICS: FATHERHOOD, PARENTING, REAL FAMILIES, LIFE STORIES, HUMOR, CHILDREN, EDITOR'S PICKS, LIFE NEWS
At the risk of coming off like a complete asshole (as usual), I would like to use this space to address a common misconception about parenthood.
In theory, parents are supposed to empathize with one other – find common cause in the fervent desire to preserve and protect the world for the next generation, and connect on some deep, almost mystical level that those poor souls who have not experienced this kind of all-consuming love cannot possibly comprehend.
In practice, however, we mostly can’t stand the rest of these ass clowns.
Sure, I feel a certain solidarity when I see a guy struggling his way through an airport lugging a child’s car seat (by a wide margin, the most unwieldy device ever constructed by humankind; it’s easier to look cool carrying a gallon jar of elephant shit than a car seat) or a woman attempting to make a toddler stop screaming on an airplane. (There is also no greater feeling than hearing that first piercing wail and realizing, “Hey, that’s not my kid! My kid’s at home! I’m ordering some bourbon!”)
Far more often, though, observing other parents inspires me to feel some mixture of judgment, anger, disbelief and scorn.
Now, as previously stated, I’m a cantankerous jerk, and watching kittens play with balls of yarn also causes me to feel judgment, anger, disbelief and scorn. But I don’t think I’m entirely alone here – though admittedly, I never think I’m entirely alone here, even when I’m entirely alone here, in my secluded, heavily fortified cabin in the woods; the doctors have been suggesting I might need to increase my meds, but what the hell do they know?
As parents, we’re all flying somewhat blind, even those of us who have read 4,478 asinine parenting books with titles like “Nurturing the Incredibly Exceptional Baby” and “101 Snacks for the Preternaturally Gifted Child” – all of them National Bestsellers, unlike the immediately remaindered “Rearing Your Statistically Average Offspring.” If you cannot pick your battles (which is code for “abandon the belief that matching socks, breakfast or cause-and-effect are important concepts”), you are royally screwed.
And thus, the only way we have to measure our successes and failures as parents – unless we are psychotic, in which case we also have college admissions – is against the yardstick of random motherfuckers we observe in public, all of whom are clearly doing a far worse job than we are.
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