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“Mom, Let Me Be Who I Am !!”….. Stop Comparing Your Child To Others

By Dr. RUMY AGARWAL

Okay, so your eight-year-old’s six-monthly class test results are due today and you are hopeful, yet  anxious (though the little guy ISN’T !!) He is his usual cheerful self, running around the house pretending he is an airplane while you are the one facing the heebie-jeebies worrying about his marks and grades, etc., and whether he will fare better than your friend’s son. Does this sound familiar? Of course, it does, because you wouldn’t be a true-blue Mom if it didn’t !!  Now whoever said that parenting is the world’s most satisfying job……the most joyous ever…….blah-blah-blah….. had actually lost it. Let’s talk reality—it is the scariest endeavour any woman can take on !!  Tell me,  which Mom hasn’t ever erupted like a volcano when the going has been really tough and compared her child to another who she thought was “so much better”? And then, a minute later,  wished she could stuff the hot-lava words back into her mouth? It happens all the time, and any Mom who hasn’t done it is a saint or a martyr!

Well, to be fair to Moms, comparison is a common enough approach to ascertain the performance of your child. You compare your child’s grades with others (“Look, Komal  Aunty’s son secured 98% in Maths” or “Your  friend Vaibhav stood first in recitation competition”- these statements are not aimed to hurt your child but, unfortunately, they do) and then determine whether your kid’s academic achievements are “normal”, better or excellent. To tell the truth, comparing your child with other kids actually stresses out both mother and child, but even with that knowledge, the urge is hard to resist. This does NOT mean that we shouldn’t point out our child’s  mistakes and help him improve, but anything beyond this is overkill.

It’s natural for parents to compare their kids,  asking other Moms how old their kids are so that they can see how their child stacks up,  to look for a frame of reference about their milestones and though it might seem appropriate to hold out a sibling or friend as a role model, comparisons almost always backfire, because to constantly harangue him about how much better others are will do nothing but give the child an inferiority complex.

This habit of comparing kids is fairly common and often begins with developmental milestones. As new parents especially, we’re concerned about our own baby hitting those established marks “on time.” The comparison game often continues once our children enter school. Instead of developmental milestones, we now have  academic benchmarks  by which to measure our children.

We somehow tend to forget that childhood is NOT a race to the top; children develop at their own pace. Yet parents often worry because their child isn’t walking at the same age that their friend’s child did, or has a much smaller vocabulary. There really isn’t a set timetable for a child’s development, kids do things in their own good time.

Most of the time we compare our child with others simply to motivate him to compete, so that he pushes his limits and fires on all cylinders to excel. But does this work for your child, is a question you need to ask yourself.  Children have different talents, interests and strengths and develop at different rates. My elder son was excellent at studies and had a  memory like an elephant, so that he could recite off lengthy poems and speeches without a flaw and I constantly had to put up with the complaints of jealous and unhappy mothers of other children in his class because my son was the teachers’ first choice for any debate or elocution competition. BUT as luck and genetics would have it, my younger son, who too excelled in academics, did not have this special ability for stage performances, and I regret to say that sometimes I did wish that he was more like his brother. But good sense prevailed over me at such times and I let him do what he was best at. I did not let my own self-worth hinge on his acccomplishments.

There is a whole body of research to prove why we shouldn’t compare:-

Here’s what you CAN do ;-

Too often,  parents see early development as a sign of intelligence or a reflection of good parenting, but it’s neither. Besides, how would you like it if your child said, “ Why can’t you be more like Rahul’s Mom ? She never compares him to anyone!”  Stop comparing NOW and enjoy parenting your child—after all, he/she is God’s special gift to you !!

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