conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2021-10-22 12:50 am

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My partner and I have a beautiful 14-month-old boy, Jason. My partner likes music (who doesn’t?), but she also harbors a severe intolerance for children’s music. She refuses to sing, play, or listen to anything but adult songs at home or in the car when our baby is there too. I’m uncomfortable at the idea of Jason being exposed to swear words and non-kid-friendly messages, and I thought this was the strongest angle from which to approach my wife. But when I said this, she looked at me like I was nuts. She said that while she’ll carefully avoid explicit lyrics as Jason learns to talk, there’s nothing wrong with playing “normal music” when a baby is present and there’s no reason to let kids’ music “take over our lives.”

But she’s wrong; Jason’s language acquisition is kicking into high gear right now, and from what I’ve read, basic children’s songs, such as the ABCs, have considerable benefit to childhood development. What I think is happening is that she still has some unresolved issues from growing up: She’s one of the oldest in a big family, and she has previously told me that while she loves her siblings, it was hard for her to be a teen in a house of under-10s she had to babysit almost every day. But now, with her own baby, I’m really surprised that she can’t even find a little tolerance to play the kind of music that will be best for him instead of what she likes. We’re both supposed to make little sacrifices as parents, but how can I open a discussion about changing our playlists to more child-appropriate music with someone who says that “hearing ‘Twinkle Twinkle’ for the millionth time makes me want to tear my ears off”?

—Baby DJ


Dear BDJ,

There are plenty of parents who can’t abide kid music, and to be honest I think you need to pick your battles, because this is not an important one. Of course you are both expected to make sacrifices (both little and big) for the sake of your child, but I don’t think listening to “adult music” is going to hurt your son. Many, many children—including my own, back in the day—are present when their parents play whatever music they’re into, and I’ve never heard of one whose “development” was harmed by it. I think if it’s important to you to make sure he is exposed to plenty of music designed especially for kids, then you can and should do that. Surely the three of you aren’t together all the time? Surely there is some time when you are alone with your son? Play and sing all the ABCs etc. then.

Honestly, this sounds like a power struggle to me. It’s a struggle you need to set aside even as you two (together) figure out what this argument is really about. Do you want to listen to your favorite music (and is this really about music?) and resent that she is doing so while you’re stuck with “Twinkle Twinkle” for the millionth time? Do you feel like the two of you should be suffering through kids’ music together? Do you feel like your partner is making fewer sacrifices than you are—or that she isn’t taking parenting as seriously as you are?

Whatever is going on beneath the surface of this battle, keep in mind that there will be plenty of things that one or another of you will do with your child that the other won’t. My daughter read Bible stories, played basketball, made paintings and collages, and built things with her dad; she played elaborate let’s-pretend games and made up stories and sang through the entire scores of Broadway musicals with me (not an inclusive list, but you get the idea). There will be plenty of important things about which you and your partner will need to be on the same page. This isn’t one of them.

https://slate.com/human-interest/2021/10/parents-grown-children-boundaries-advice-care-feeding.html
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

[personal profile] oursin 2021-10-22 03:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Singing lovely traditional folk-songs (full of violence, murder, and betrayal...) of course
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)

[personal profile] starwatcher 2021-10-23 04:30 am (UTC)(link)
When I was five, my favorite poem for Dad to read aloud to me and my 3-yr-old sis was "The Highwayman"; I don't know if I was attracted by the cadence or the illustrations. I completely understood that [a] the girlfriend killed herself to warn her lover of the ambush and [b] the soldiers killed him anyway when he rode back to her after hearing about her death. What my 5-yr-old brain couldn't comprehend was why he rode away in the first place; if he was going to let the soldiers kill him, that could've happened the first time he rode toward the girlfriend, right? LOL! I remember being satisfied that they got to be together as ghosts.

But yeah, there's some horrific stuff in traditional nursery tales -- Hans Anderson and Brothers Grimm -- which people have ignored with the way Disney has sanitized many aspects. Somehow, most of us managed to grow to relatively normal adulthood.
cereta: Syfy's Alice (Alice)

[personal profile] cereta 2021-10-22 11:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Two words: fairy tales.