Chicago Sun-Times

Smothering kids won’t protect them in the long run

- NATALIE Y. MOORE @natalieymo­ore Natalie Moore is a reporter for WBEZ.

Iam now 45 years old, dubbing it my Jordan year. To be sure, it’s humbling. The weight takes longer to shed. Crinkles frame the eyes. I fashion myself as cosmopolit­an and stylish, but I’m probably not hip.

This month I scanned the Lollapaloo­za lineup and recognized only a few names. Janet Jackson is sampled in a new record, a reminder that her sad song is more than 30 years old. I’m waiting for my children to mock New Edition and Jodeci songs as V103 radio “dusties” the way I referenced Motown music and oldie records played by my parents when I was growing up.

The 1990s were a golden era for music and culture. Exposure to A Tribe Called Quest and Mary J. Blige is essential to impart onto a new generation. But again, it’s probably old people’s music to them. Soon enough I’ll be pop-culture clueless in a way that not even Twitter can save me.

And while I am in denial about the sun rising on middle age, some of my friends and peers are shrieking “get off my lawn!” in a manner that’s disconcert­ing to me. Every generation thinks the one behind them is worse, disrespect­ful and hapless when it comes to music — and simply not as good as theirs. In the words of R&B crooner Keith Sweat, something just ain’t right.

We should check ourselves. Reminiscin­g about the good ole days can beget a form of amnesia that distorts reality. Can we seriously think we are the moral authority on music when we listened to misogynist­s AMG and Snoop? Do we really think we weren’t disrespect­ful to teachers or authority figures?

When my contempora­ries complain about the violence in Chicago today being worse than in the past, or talk about how we’re the last generation that could play outside without fear, I am dumbfounde­d. I went to high school in Chicago in the 1990s. I remember hanging out in co-ed groups and the threat of gang violence based on colors and territorie­s could threaten a night out bowling.

One time on a CTA bus, a girl from a rival high school tried to cut my hair. Neighborho­od boys worried about getting jumped and often had to put on a show of exaggerate­d masculinit­y to keep out of trouble. Fights broke out at the mall. We knew people who dabbled in gang life. These stories aren’t urban badges of honor. They are simply the truth. The crime stats alone

PLAYING WITH FRIENDS SOLO IN A PARK, RIDING PUBLIC TRANSPORTA­TION AND EXPLORING NEIGHBORHO­ODS DURING THE DAY ARE NORMAL ACTIVITIES. TOO MANY RESTRICTIO­NS CAN STUNT OUR CHILDREN’S GROWTH AND DEVELOPMEN­T. I KNOW THE HEADLINES ARE SCARY, YET FEAR IS ITS OWN PRISON.

show that things weren’t better back then.

For many, those experience­s are washed away when they become parents. Adulting is hard and we compartmen­talize our past. Feelings of youthful invincibil­ity are shoved out of the way when you have your own children. I get it — you don’t want to take risks with your children or use bad judgment.

The flip side is that while every family wants to make sound decisions, the leash we put on our children can paralyze them. I do wonder if that anxiety projects on children. Playing with friends solo in a park, riding public transporta­tion and exploring neighborho­ods during the day are normal activities. Too many restrictio­ns can stunt our children’s growth and developmen­t.

I know the headlines are scary, yet fear is its own prison. I live in this city and do not approach this as a pundit but as a resident and a mother. Smothering doesn’t protect my children in the long run.

And instead of wagging our fingers at young people or disparagin­g their cultural tastes (as our parents and grandparen­ts did to us at times) let’s figure out a better way to settle into middle age. The kids can stay on the lawn as long as they’ll listen to a little New Jack Swing.

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED BY NATALIE Y. MOORE ?? Columnist Natalie Y. Moore with her daughter Skye.
PHOTO PROVIDED BY NATALIE Y. MOORE Columnist Natalie Y. Moore with her daughter Skye.

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