About 3 years ago, stemming from my sister the philosopher, I
had written a post here about "mothers
who lie" and creative mothering.
But a friend of mine used another idea that works sometimes called the
"Question Box" which you
can use when you either don’t know the answer, or you don’t have the emotional energy
or the actual time needed to fully answer, or you want to bring in your partner
on the answer, or if you are asked something very private in a very public
place, and so on. It goes something like this, “that is such a great question, here is a short answer
now, but I think we should write that down and put it in our question box so we
can answer it more fully this weekend when me, you, and daddy are all together”
or “…so we can look up the answer in this great book I have on the human body”
or “I don’t think I have a good answer to that right now, but let’s make sure
we look it up together.” But then you have to get to that question box
at some point!
Another fun approach to a different kind of question box
question is to just lay it out there, “You are never going to believe the answer to this question” and then go
ahead and tell them exactly how that
baby really comes out of the woman’s body.
Tell them the people in their 2nd grade class at school may
not know this information yet, and they can wait until their own mommies tell
them the answer. And, you can wait a wee bit longer on telling them how the baby
gets in there. Just the facts, ma’am.
It’s about creative mothering and telling the truth. And being in a special place because of what
we do at work every day. And being there
for our own children’s growing minds and emotional development. With lots of questions and some well-timed answers.
Love the question box! We do that, although not in the same way - "That's a great question! We'll talk about it tomorrow" for the inevitable great questions that are posed at bedtime.
ReplyDeleteI answered all her questions about sex and reproduction honestly at the appropriate level, which meant small bits of information followed by "what do you think about that?" until I got the clear message that it was enough. "Stop, Mom! Do we have to talk about this?" happened much more quickly at 12 than it did at 8, and I'm glad we had the conversations at 8 when she was willing to listen and talk. She still does talk to us (she's 14) and I am careful to keep the conversation going by asking general questions and honestly answering what she asks. Yes, honestly. Yes, every time. Yes, starting when she asked how the baby got out at age 4 and how the baby got in at age 5. Yes, with accurate language. We're doctors. We really should be able to talk about the human body.
You sound like a great listener! Yeah, small bits of accurate info, and asking them a sincere question about what they think. Answering honestly and listening with interest. Makes for great conversations, and all those accurately named body parts too, uterus and the like.
DeleteLove the "question box". I'm borrowing that idea for the BeeHive :-)
ReplyDeleteAh yes, for the beehive! Or, you could see how it goes over in residency morning report...
DeleteHey! I just saw this (I have been off the blogging grid for over a week now... ). Great post. I also consider myself a "creative mother" and that isn't a reference to my arts & crafts skill....
ReplyDelete