Susan Sachs Lipman has more than 25 years experience as a writer, social media manager and community leader. She is currently the Social Media Director for the Children & Nature Network, an international movement dedicated to connecting children with nature. She has written for national magazines including Us, Los Angeles, Entrepreneur, Woman, and Whole Earth Review and has been on staff at Zoetrope: All-Story and Harper's Bazaar. She runs the blog, Slow Family Online, offering activities, crafts tips and more to slow down and enjoy family time and one another.
"Having trouble keeping up? Try slowing down.
Crazy busy, right? Every parent I know is crazy busy right now,
saddled with a to-do list that seems to grow faster than a kid.
The only way to keep up is too juggle faster.
Or not.
What if the only way to keep up was too slow down?
"Take small steps. Walk around the neighborhood after dinner and
talk and observe," advises Susan Sachs Lipman, who is making a case
for what she calls the "slow parenting movement."
Author of the newly published "Fed up with Frenzy: Slow Parenting
in a Fast-Moving World" (Sourcebooks) and the blog "Slow Family,"
Lipman suggests that we parents - not the schools, the kids, our
work, our partner or the myriad other villains - are creating our
own stress.
"When children are asked what they want most from their parents,
the answer is often more of their attentive and unpressured time.
If parents could realize that that's what kids want, they might
create more opportunities for family bonding and having fun doing
simple and memorable activities," she told me.
Easier said then done. I used to have a personal rule of opting out
of weekend birthday parties because there are so many and each one
ate into our family weekends - time I looked forward to when our
family could move at our pace. I say "used to" because this rule
eroded when my older daughter turned 5 and decided she loves
birthday parties. This Saturday we attended two back-to-back, then
added a playdate after for good measure.
My girls were deliriously happy. But also delirious.
I asked Lipman how to practice slow parenting in the face of a
child's boundless energy and enthusiasm.
"Slow parenting doesn't look the same for every family and can even
change from time to time within a family, based on family needs. It
isn't as much about doing nothing as it is about doing things
consciously and at the right pace for the family.
"I think it's important to take cues from your child. If the
activities are child-driven and the child seems to thrive (and they
can be accomplished without undue parental duress), then I might
lean toward doing them. If the activities are causing stress, then
I might choose or help a child choose which ones to let go for the
sake of family harmony and down time. Much depends on what else is
happening in the family, the needs of other siblings, and
additional obligations at any given time," she said in an
e-mail.
This approach might work on the weekends, but slow parenting seems
at odds with our school days, when academics and enrichment
activities fill up the hours. I asked her for some guidance for the
stressed parents who have a packed schedule because they want to
expand their child's universe by exposing them to dance and art and
language and science.
"Slow parenting doesn't inhibit learning. It enhances it," she
said. "While organized extracurricular activities can be terrific,
they aren't the only way to expand a child's universe. In many
cases, they may be inhibiting children's learning, experimentation,
discovery and family bonding time. There is a growing body of
research that shows that play time and family time, especially in
early childhood, are the greatest determinants of academic and
other success. Children learn through play. For that reason, in
addition to a whole host of other physical and psychological
benefits, we should place more value on family time and play than
we typically do.
"Childhood lasts about 18 years, and there are usually plenty of
opportunities to try different things. Problems can occur when, in
our rush toward achievement, we try to do too many too soon or all
at once."
What about for parents of older children, whose grades and
activities "count" when it comes to college applications?
Lipman cited studies that found "the very character traits that
lead to academic and other success - resilience, optimism,
confidence, empathy and better performance in school - flourish not
from extracurriculars, but from family time and parental support
and love. My hope is that this information will help parents relax
a little and enjoy family time on its own merits, as well as for
its substantial benefits."
Overall, she said, "slow parenting" is about being present and
engaging in small simple activities, like cooking together or
playing tag after dinner.
Might "slow parenting" work for you? Or is the idea guilt-inducing,
as if now you have to worry about fitting in a game of tag, too?" -
The Washington Post
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