I was just reading this article about a 6-year-old girl who sweeps, fishes, cleans what she fishes, and cooks for her family -- without being asked, ever. Guess what? An anthropologist had to travel all the way to the Peruvian Amazon to find her. Carolina Izqierdo met this girl, and dozens like her, while living with the Matsigenka tribe.
Meanwhile in America, her fellow anthropologist Elinor Oachs filmed 32 families in the Los Angeles area and witnessed the most jaw-dropping laziness. Kids who won't tie their shoes. Who won't get their own forks out of the drawer. Who expect to be waited on like royalty.
Embarrassing! The article asks that shaming question, "Why Are American Kids So Spoiled?" Yeah ... why the hell are WE spoiling our kids?
The article goes on making me, as a parent, squirm, describing the decadent lives of American kids. Not only do we NOT require them to lift a finger, even to help themselves (forget helping the rest of the family), we also buy them too much shit and we let said shit clutter up our homes. Writer Elizabeth Kolbert asks:
What values do we convey by turning our homes into warehouses for dolls? By assigning our kids chores and then rewarding them when they screw up? By untying and then retying their shoes for them? It almost seems as if we’re actively trying to raise a nation of “adultescents.” And, perhaps without realizing it, we are.
Like many of you, I was not raised this way. I cleaned my room and our bathroom. We did chores. I had to spend time weeding the garden before I could go out to play. I had to babysit my younger siblings and I don't remember getting paid for it.
Compare to this, life for my 8-year-old looks cushy. He does a few things for himself: He pours his own glass of milk (and mops up if he spills), he sometimes helps put away his laundry, with a lot of nagging, he'll clean up his room.
And then when you look at how independent those Matsigenka kids are -- oy, the shame. We really should be teaching our kids to be more self-sufficient, sooner.
But is it really fair to compare American kids to a community in the middle of the Amazonian rain forest? Our kids face totally different challenges in life. We subject our kids to relentless high-stakes testing and mountains of homework. We're driving them to lessons and practice and games. Maybe kids are just ... tired! Maybe we're tired.
It would be really easy to just let myself get sucked into a shame spiral after reading this -- and you know what that leads to. Drastic changes in the home that don't work and that you give up on after a week or so.
But I think I can still learn something here. In the U.S. we tend to value perfection and jumping through hoops over the satisfaction of a job well done (even if it's not perfectly done). We're focused on the destination -- I think the Matsigenka are more focused on the journey.
So maybe if we relax a little, if we're okay with our kids missing a spot when they clean the mirror, we could maybe make this work. If chores were less about completing a task and more about learning good habits for life, we might even get more buy-in from our kids, too. It's something I'm going to start working on with my son.
How much responsibility do your kids have at home?
Image via miss-britt/Flickr


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Comments 60
Kids need to be kids. They need to play, goof off, and get dirty. They also need to be productive members of society, and good parents realize we would be doing society and our kids a disservice if we allowed them to grow up spoiled, entitled, and helpless
I grew up not having any chores other than keeping my room clean, making my bed, picking up after myself. I think alot of it was my Mom was very particular and would rather clean things the way she wanted them and wouldn't even let me do laundry because she didn't want me to mess anything up... SO when I moved out at 19, got married and had a baby all in a couple of months I was completely in shock, I not only was clueless as to how to manage everything but I was completely overwhelmed. Its taken me years to finally have a system and have a smoothly running household. I will not do that to my now 2 kids, I am going to prepare them for life so they do not have to be blindsided by responsibility that you will have daily, I will always make sure they have fun with it and aren't overwhelmed as kids but they will be prepared adults for sure!
You might have noticed, Adriana, that that New Yorker piece by Elizabeth Kolbert mentions my book, if only in passing. And if only she'd called me for comment! No, our thoroughly American kids are not going to be like those Matzigenka kids. Just as they're not going to sit down to a plate of escargot with French tots in their creche. But they can and should do more, and not just because, heck, why should WE do it all for them? They should do more so they feel the reward, so they get the good part of life along with the bad. That's, you know, how you GROW. And not end up moving back in with mom and dad!
Denise
www.meanmomsrule.com
4mutts.. and anyone else that agrees with her.. I had a VERY STRICTED HOME.. to the point where i LITTERALY had to do EVERYTHING from 12 and up.. i am the only child.. i had to make sure the house was spotless (compleate detail clean, right down to washing the walls and base boards) My parents while i was growning up NEVER HAD TO LIFT A FINGER.. i was.. a slave and struggled through school becacuse i couldnt concentrate on my lessons because i was to worried with the condition of the house and getting grounded or beat if it wasnt up to "code" i am in no way saying you are like this.. but just be carefull with the load you put on your kids.. they are kids.. not your personal slaves. Teaching them to take care of themselves and putting the pressure on them to run the whole house so you dont have to do shit.. is compleatly diffrent.
No offence to anyone like 4mutts or to her at alll. My kids WILL have chores..but it will never be to the extreame my parents put me.