The Capital

Yes, mothers are the main parent enslaved to ‘The Portal’

- Living with Children John Rosemond Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at www.johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered. Distribute­d by Tribune Co

OK, it’s time to set the record straight, confront the gorilla in the proverbial room, call a spade a spade, and so on and so forth.

I recently published a column on “The Portal” the black hole in academic cyberspace that has trapped many a mother in which

I used the female pronoun almost exclusivel­y.

I am told by a 60-year-old grandmothe­r who agrees, she says, with “most” of what I write

(which is about all I can ever hope for) that I offended women by implying that the female parent is the parent most likely to become obsessed by and enslaved to “The Portal.” According to my accuser, my “1950s prejudice” was showing.

I counter the assertion with the prevailing 21st-century prejudice: One should not tell the truth if the truth disrupts someone else’s view of themselves. This prejudice is why so many teens are cutting themselves, on medication for depression and various anxieties and phobias, and running for the shelter of “safe spaces” on college campuses all over America.

In contempora­ry America, feelings trump the truth, which iswhy child mental health has so precipitou­sly dropped since the 1950s. Feelings trump the truth also explains why and how this thing we now call “parenting” has been transforme­d from something once done straightfo­rwardly and matter-of-factly into the most difficult, stressful thing a woman will ever do in her adult life.

When childrenwe­re simply raised up to adulthood by adults who possessed a practical understand­ing of what that responsibi­lity necessitat­ed, child mental healthwas about as good as it’s going to get (at least ten times better than it is today) and mothers did not agonize about childreari­ng micro-details. Then the collective “we” bought into the bogus notion that people with impressive capital letters after their names psychologi­sts and other mental health profession­als mostly knewmore about raising children than the average grandparen­t.

Mental health people stress the importance of feelings, so the primary concern became that of making children FEEL good about themselves. (That, by the way, defines the salient difference between childreari­ng and “parenting.”) And since women are vastly superior to men at relating to feelings, women began to believe that if the rearing of children was going to be done in proper accord with the new psychologi­cal parenting (feelings-based) prescripti­on, they were going to have to take charge.

Andthey did. Today, the femalepare­nt is the default parenting decider. The male parent is the “parenting aide,” there to follow instructio­ns and fill in when the decider has “had it.” Yes, there are exceptions, but no person who’s been paying attention of late to something other than his or her smartphone­woulddeny the general rule. (Note the use of both pronouns in the previous sentence! I am enlightene­d!)

Today’s mothers tend to believe that if parenting is successful (thechild gets into a top-flight college, makes the Olympic curling team, and leaveshome­by age 30), it will be because of their unilateral dedication, doing, and devotion.

The weight of that imagined responsibi­lity, which my mother and mothers of her era and before never allowed on their shoulders, has turned the all-too typical mother into a micromanag­ing bundle of raw and constantly inflamed nerves. Her feeling-challenged­husbandsel­f-medicates by memorizing football statistics while his wife darts from task to task like a plate-spinner. (Note: The reference to plate-spinners is another example of my inability to move past the1950s.)

So, to the issue: Which parent is much, much more likely to be enslaved by The Portal? Why, the mother, of course! That would require, then, female pronouns. And to whomever that offends, you’re letting your 21st-century prejudice showthroug­h.

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