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On Parenting: A Mess of Their Own

Is your kid's bedroom theirs, or yours?

One of the most amusing things about your kid growing up is how the annual arguments change. In our house, we’ve gone through my daughter’s toys every year after Thanksgiving to make room for the upcoming present-apocalypse. Last year, my daughter clung like a demon to Legos that she never played with.

This year, she has to get rid of everything she owns instead.

At least temporarily.

She has to put all her worldly possessions into boxes because we’re painting her room purple. At her request, we are getting rid of the yellow paint on her walls. We put this paint in her bedroom before she was born, because of our parental refusal to bow to gender identity by painting it pink. (And then she was born with jaundice. The room color made her look like a zombie baby. You can’t win for losing.)

After seven consecutive years of having the same favorite color, she’s finally convinced us that it’s not going to change. And after nearly as many years of arguing about those Legos, she’s convinced me that her room is her room. So we’re doing what she’s asked for, and painting the dang thing purple. And she gets to keep the Legos.

So many of us feel that our children’s rooms are a reflection on us as parents. We decorate them, organize them, and clean them, and then wonder why our kids feel no responsibility for them. Why they don’t tidy their room up to our standards and value the beautiful place we’ve made it.

It’s because we’ve made it ours.

I’ve spent the past year trying desperately to stay pull back and let her have her room the way she wants it. When her clothes and toys pile up to the point that it looks like an episode of hoarders, I just tell her that I can’t come into that room for goodnight story and hugs without having a nervous breakdown. She’ll have to have her book read to her on the couch, and then put herself to bed, because I can’t go in there.

It’s still her choice to make a path, ask for help cleaning, or have her cuddles in the living room. Because it’s her room.

This time of year especially, I want my house lovely. I want people to be able to come over and feel the holiday spirit. I want a home that’s warm and welcoming, inviting and comfortable. And a bedroom that’s a minefield doesn’t fit into that.

But it’s not my room. 

I can justify making her clean up the public spaces in our home. I can say no toys can be left in the living room after our pre-bedtime “10-minute clean up.” I can even justify banning some things—like food—from entering her room, because a Nutella spoon under a pile of clothes is something I cannot even consider without nausea.

But the door to her room is the door to her world, and I don’t make non-safety related rules in there any more.

Probably because I’ve unclenched, she’s started to do the same. As she’s packed up her boxes this past week, she’s set aside things she’s outgrown. She has toys to send to her cousins, books for the school exchange, and a coat to give to the coat drive.

And she did all this herself.

And when she unpacks her stuff back into her newly purple room, I will help her, and follow her instructions on where things should go. And when she puts a pile of plastic cra… I mean, wonderful memorabilia toys from birthday party gift bags... into a place of honor, I will grit my teeth and say it looks great.

And it will look great. Because her room will look just like her. And that’s because it’s hers.

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Where do you draw the line with your kids' bedrooms? Do you clean up after them or let them decide how messy is too messy? Tell us in the comments section.

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Richard Bray May 10, 2013 at 02:00 am
The City Council recommended to KCLS that a Library Entrance over the Cedar River be kept. I lookRead More forward to KCLS acting upon this recommendation about what our community has asked for all along--a library that we can be proud of.
Kendall Watson (Editor) April 19, 2013 at 04:46 pm
@rentonben it may be pleasing to the sense of aesthetics, but maintaining food at room temperatureRead More for too long (2 hours) is potentially dangerous, according to the CDC. The CDC also reports that each year, about 1 in 6 Americans (or 48 million people) gets sick, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3,000 die of foodborne diseases — which it characterizes as a "preventable health problem" http://www.cdc.gov/features/befoodsafe/
rentonben April 19, 2013 at 03:19 pm
The one regulation that stood out to me as being particularly "American" is the one aboutRead More noodles "not being cold enough." I've been all over Asia and Europe, and leaving noodles out in room temperature is generally considered the right way to protect their texture and flavor. I almost don't want to comment on this story, as I don't want to bring a spotlight on these good people minor problems. I'm more that willing to give them a second chance.
Kendall Watson (Editor) April 18, 2013 at 06:42 pm
Very interesting, Rentonben. They sell food in a similar way in the Philippines at roadside placesRead More called "carinderias". But those places that are keeping food out with no control over temperature appeared to be very much "at your own risk" sorts of places (things tend to be very much less "regulated" in the PI). If we didn't see them bringing out the food from the kitchen to the table or tray at these places, we avoided them, as we had no idea how long the food had sat out in the afternoon shade. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) actually urges avoiding these establishments altogether. http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/destinations/philippines.htm
Richard Bray April 12, 2013 at 05:20 pm
Great letter David! As you said we expect that a reasonable priced, full size library basic designRead More will be among the ones and that KCLS will present on Monday. Residents expect to be treated with respect by KCLS.
Sara M. DuBois April 12, 2013 at 07:56 am
Well put, David Keyes, well written. I sincerely hope that Renton's Mayor Law and the City CouncilRead More are considering all that Mr. Keyes has stated, remembering that their constituents here in Renton are the most important ones to continue considering. That KCLS's Board of Trustees is only secondary to we citizens, because we arw the ones that must ultimately be satisfied with the results of these alternative plans.
Michelle Peterson April 12, 2013 at 12:33 am
The KCLS is a fabulous catalog and resource to our family. I never had access to any of the materialRead More I regularly access today, thanks to the anexation. I have borrowed books for research on Sanskrit and Yoga that have come from far reaches of the county. My family has enjoyed music and movies that we otherwise never would have. I have listened to many audio books while walking my dogs hours and hours around this beautiful city. I love being a part of the King Co Library System and would be truely heartbroken were we to loose it. Renton has never had such resources alone as we do being a part of a greater system. Please, please, please, keep KCLS. It's the catalog, not the building that matters!!
Dave Beedon April 9, 2013 at 06:31 pm
Good letter, Stuart. I hope the City and KCLS can get together to solve this issue.
mthrship March 25, 2013 at 12:51 pm
Hi Kerrick, Strangely enough, this plan looks like they took the BIG 5 plan and tried to fit itRead More onto the deck of the current library. Many of the items talked about in the Renton Reporter article aren't the only way to go. And, that article seems to be a direct response to residents protesting KCLS' high-handed and money-wasting tactics. As usual, KCLS has given residents one solution. And, it's the one KCLS said they most feared! Why drizzle on and on about avoiding environmental impact and then produce a design that's not only a dead loss for residents in terms of service area and stack space, but will set off every flag KCLS wanted to avoid? Because they're not dealing in good faith with Renton. On the face of it this design looks like a very real attempt to walk away from what voters said they clearly wanted. KCLS is trying to make the possible impossible and has given no valid rationale to date.
Dave Beedon March 24, 2013 at 02:30 am
The City of Renton must pay for building or renovating its its two libraries. KCLS is in charge ofRead More developing new building designs. KCLS should be concerned about the opinions of the people paying for the new library, but it is ignoring the two critical design issues (space and entrance) mentioned repeatedly by residents. Is this “serving the public interest”? The proposed design eliminates about 30% of the current floor space by demolishing the section abutting the pedestrian bridge. That eliminates the entrance over the river and affects the space available for services. What becomes of the delightful children’s area if that portion of the building is demolished? The building would better serve the community if it added meeting rooms and study rooms. More computers might also be beneficial. But how can these things be provided if the library is made smaller? The City will either accept or reject the proposed building design next week, after KCLS’s Open House on the 26th. A majority of the City Council has not shown support for our concerns about the library. If you want your tax money spent well, please come to the City Council meeting on Monday, March 25 and tell the City that it must reject KCLS’s proposed building design. If you don’t want the library’s wonderful character destroyed, come to KCLS’s Open House at the library on Tuesday the 26th and stand up to an organization whose motto could be “we have to ruin the library to improve it.”
David A. Keyes March 24, 2013 at 12:57 am
Kerrick is spot on with her points here! Her single letter describes accurately and eloquently moreRead More reasons for you to attend Monday's Council Mtg & Tuesday's "design presentation" than KCLS's Ptacek and his ill-informed 'communications' specialist could distort or diminish in twenty interviews to the local rag. By the way, the drawings Kerrick references were delivered to the City three weeks ago on 3/1, and titled, in part, "...100% SD". "SD" standing for Schematic Design. These are scaled drawings the architecture and engineering consultants have workied on since at least early November. The submission is significant enough that, if accepted by our City Council, it will establish "Final Design" direction under the ILA, for the remainder of the project. Ask yourself why KCLS Director Ptacek and his staffer, Ms. Brand, would claim in the Reporter interview that this work to be presented Tuesday is "nowhere near the design phase."? Is it possible that they simply want to assuage your concerns? Or that by doing so, imply you really need not bother to attend...? ATTEND! ASK questions of the consultants! If the response given is no answer or makes no sense, say so and REPEAT THE QUESTION!. Ask what ALTERNATIVE solutions were explored! Do not accept for a moment any statement that your question will be answered at to a later date. Presently we own this Library. It is still ours. As Taxpayers, WE are the ones paying for the decisions of KCLS & Council .
Kendall Watson (Editor) April 10, 2013 at 05:03 pm
Hi Heidi, We're working hard on improving Renton Patch and should have a newer version of ourRead More website soon. Here's a sneak peak at what we'll look like soon at one of our sister sites: http://longbeach.patch.com/
Heidi Bujak April 10, 2013 at 04:48 pm
we need some kind of calender where when you add it in. it adds the events auto to all who appliedRead More to your calender. This calander needs to be on FB so we can add the app to our page. Its hard to look at yours, come back past it in. its too much trouble to do this all day for all events. I cant stand jumping all over trying to find all the events copy paste. its a lot of work for many people doing the same thing. is this 1960 office?
Richard Bray April 4, 2013 at 04:45 pm
Non BofA customers, most museums have monthly free days - check their websites to find out when.Read More That said, this is a nice benefit for BofA customers.