In my last post, I discussed how Shawn and I strive to move away from punishing our children, and instead, focus on treating them with the same respect we give one another. Choosing to live by this philosophy has forced us to reexamine nearly every interaction we have with our children on a day to day basis. Do we put limits on how much television they watch? Do we censor their video or computer games? Do we monitor what they eat? Do we have a chore chart? Do we enforce a bedtime?
In short, for us, the answer is no. We don’t really do any of those things. Let me explain why. One thing we discovered is that it’s not really possible to control what any other person does, including your children. You may be able to control the way they behave in front of you, but you cannot control their actions, thoughts, behaviors when you aren’t around. I’d rather focus on supporting them as they learn to navigate within their own comfort zones, rather than forcing them to live within mine.
€œBut you need to be the parents,€ is a phrase Shawn and I have heard many times. Living consensually doesn’t mean my children are allowed to do anything they want to, regardless of the consequences. But it does mean that we try and extend them the same trust and respect as individuals that we extend to each other. Just as I couldn’t imagine telling Shawn what he could or could not eat, or when he had played his video game long enough, I couldn’t imagine forcing my children to eat or not eat or stay awake or go to sleep when I wanted them too. So, Connor has the freedom to choose how he spends his day. He chooses what he when he wants to eat, how he spends his free time, how much television/video gaming he does, when he goes to bed, etc.
I realize that many people find this hard to understand. Let me try and explain. Let’s take eating as an example: An infant will cry when they are hungry, and as the parent, we feed them. It doesn’t matter if it’s four o’clock in the morning; we feed them. As the infant gets older, we expect it to conform to a three-meals-a-day schedule, perhaps with some small snacks in between. But what if our child is hungry two hours before dinner? How many times have you heard the phrase, €œWait until dinner, if you eat now, you’ll spoil your appetite?€
Isn’t the reality, if the child eats when they are hungry, they will satiate their appetite? Why did we stop trusting our children to eat when they’re hungry? Shawn and I also try and avoid forcing our children to eat what we think they should eat. We have tried to stress to them that food is used to fuel our body, and we have had lots of discussions about which foods provide good fuel for our bodies, and which foods might taste good, but not provide as good of a fuel for our bodies. As a result, my children don’t eat for comfort, and they don’t overeat, because they don’t view any food as being off-limits. They’re able to follow their bodies’ cues and eat what they want, when they want. Knowing that cookies or ice cream is available when they want it, makes it less of a temptation for them to overeat those foods, because they know they’re available when they want them.
We follow the same guidelines with sleep. We trust them to follow their bodies’ cues and sleep when they’re tired. Now, I will fully admit that Connor is one of those children who get more wound up the later it gets. Ten o’clock is pretty much his breaking point. After several weeks of him staying up until one in the morning and then waking up at seven and being cranky and tired all day long, we sat down and talked to him about it. He knew he was overly tired, but enjoyed having time to play Xbox uninterrupted at night after his two younger siblings were asleep. So we worked out a compromise: He can have full access to the Xbox while the babies are asleep and can’t bother him. And, in turn, he would get to bed earlier every night so he could be well rested the next day. We’ve been doing this for about four months, and he is in bed between nine and ten o’clock every night, and his mood has improved GREATLY.
So living consensually doesn’t mean that we don’t parent our children. It means that we focus on parenting them from a place of respect and trust. It means we strive to have a peaceful, joyful home. It means we focus on letting our children be who they are, and not on trying to shape them into who we expect them to be.


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