Los Angeles Times

GOOD REASON FOR ALL THE HOVERING

‘Helicopter’ parents get a bad rap, but with all the crises of the world, don’t blame us for being anxious.

- MARY McNAMARA

This column is the latest in a series on parenting children in the final years of high school, “Emptying the Nest.”

I recently saw a headline in the New York Times that I thought was the answer to my prayers: “Anxious Parents Are the Ones Who Need Help.”

Yes, please, I thought, hoping to find acknowledg­ment of all the very real forces that can turn any parent into an anxious mess.

Things like school shootings, worsening teen mental health, the ongoing debate over the danger of smartphone­s, the rising cost of a college education, the growing restrictio­ns on female reproducti­ve rights, the housing crisis, the opioid crisis, the fentanyl crisis and, of course, the climate crisis.

As I prepare to launch my third child out of the nest, my personal and parental anxiety is at a fever pitch; I’ll take any offer of help I can get.

Alas, it was not to be. The piece, written by a senior staff psychiatri­st at Boston University Health Services, focused exclusivel­y on parental anxieties that can arise during a child’s college experience, particular­ly freshman year.

In a tone as kind and generous as possible, the author advised parents to just try to detach and chill.

It’s something parents hear all the time, when they are not being inundated with every type of story that can fit under the headline “The Kids Are Not Alright”: Modern American parents

need to stop trying to control every moment of their children’s lives and relax.

Wouldn’t that be nice? To just, you know, let it all go and relax?

To be fair, I absolutely plan to relax, at least a little, once I have deposited my third and youngest child at the college of her choice.

(This may be wishful thinking. Her current top picks include three UCs, each with an average admission GPA of 4.0, and an out-of-state school that costs — as the young woman leading the orientatio­n informed us with a completely straight face — $90,000 a year.)

After we sent our older kids to college, my husband and I left them to their own devices, which worked out just fine — though I can see why some parents feel justified in demanding that their child have a VIP college experience when the sticker price, as it is for Boston University, is $82,000.

But honestly, it’s the time before college that can turn even the most stoic, no-nonsense parent into an insomniac mess.

Because no one gets more dire warnings, eyerolling criticism or conflictin­g informatio­n thrown at them than parents.

The kids, we are told repeatedly, are not doing well. They are depressed, they are anxious, they hate their bodies. They are addicted to their phones, don’t know how to make friends, can’t read or do math well enough and are easy prey for sexual predators and brainwashi­ng extremists. They don’t want to work, they can’t find work, and the work they do find doesn’t offer benefits and they can’t afford to live close to it.

Try to prevent or mitigate any of the above and you risk being labeled neurotic, a “helicopter parent.” Take a more hands-off approach and you’re accused of being uninvolved or neglectful.

Occasional­ly, it is acknowledg­ed that larger forces — gun violence; overcrowde­d schools stripped of arts and vocational programs; racism, sexism, homophobia; the unregulate­d force of social media — could be contributi­ng factors in our children’s perceived problems.

More usually, however, the parents somehow shoulder the blame.

Either we’re not giving our children enough free time or we’re not monitoring what they do. We’re too fixated on convention­al definition­s of success or we’re pressuring them to be unconventi­onal. We’re not allowing them to make their own mistakes and face the consequenc­es or we’re not seeing signs of trouble early and getting them the help they clearly need.

All on our own, by the way. As research shows, the historic safety nets of extended family and involved community are increasing­ly frayed by mobility and the economic necessity of a two-income family, and nothing has been offered to replace them.

If you can afford help, you are faced with inevitable criticism for putting your kids in daycare or “handing them over” to a nanny, a relationsh­ip that often raises issues of economic disparity, immigratio­n status and racism.

And it doesn’t end when the little geezers turn 18 or graduate from college. Parents of young adults are increasing­ly expected to force them to be independen­t while also either underwriti­ng their rent/down payments or allowing them to return home.

But sure, parents are anxious because they are paranoid control freaks.

I love being a parent, and most of the time I simply ignore the endless criticism that has been spewed my way. You don’t think I should breastfeed in public / put my kids in daycare / let them have sleepovers / give them smartphone­s / track those phones’ locations / enroll them in club sports / encourage them to have birth control, Narcan and fentanyl testing strips on hand? I don’t remember asking you.

And if you are not willing to come to my house and cook a meal or empty this damn dishwasher, I really don’t want to hear it.

But in recent years, I have felt myself wilt, felt myself waver, felt myself surrender to all the studies and opinion pieces and become a big hot mess.

Perhaps it was the pandemic, which traumatize­d so many of us in so many ways. Perhaps it’s just because my youngest is, and always will be, the baby of the family. But I find myself beset by second-guessing.

She seems happy. Is that happiness real? She’s doing well in school. Is she too worried about grades? She has a job, participat­es in extracurri­culars. Is her schedule too full? She has an active social life. Is wherever she’s going safe? She seems a little down. Is she clinically depressed?

It’s exhausting and slightly ridiculous: “Don’t choke on the one-yard line,” I tell myself. In a few months, she’ll be 18; in a year, she’ll be out the door. But then what?

I’m not a helicopter parent, a term I have come to loathe. But

I am currently an anxious one. And you know what? That’s a perfectly reasonable thing to be.

 ?? Karlotta Freier For The Times ??
Karlotta Freier For The Times
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