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Comments

Kerry

I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought that piece was a steaming pile of crap.

Jenn

So glad you found a way to bring the snark. It was totally worth it!

Just Shireen

The Yellow Face in the sky, it burns.

Diet Coke all over my keyboard.

Jenn

And congratulations on the Redbook column - I meant to add that above - :)

Lara K-W

I'm ending this post to my friend in Boston who's a child psychiatrist. She's going to die laughing. You're hilarious, Alice.

Diane47

I see a "Let's Panic" column lurking there in your brain! Let it out!

Lara K-W

That would be "sending," of course. See, that's why you'll have a column in Redbook and not me. Proofreading!

Jennifer

Awesome with the awesomeness. Nobody does snark as well as you, Alice.

Rebekah

"My son didn't like it this morning when I mimicked his noises, as you suggested, and kept telling him "You are communicating and I am listening and responding!" I should mention that he's seven. What am I doing wrong?"

Ah-hahahahhaha! Truly AWESOME and hilarious! Thanks for this and congrats again on the news about Redbook - so well deserved! :)

Debl

I also think I heard something about how you should cuddle your baby? And maybe kiss it every once in a while? I don't know, nobody tells me these things...

Debl

I also think I heard something about how you should cuddle your baby? And maybe kiss it every once in a while? I don't know, nobody tells me these things...

Lynne Marie Wanamaker

Alice Bradley, you are my hero in snark.

Laura

Thank you. I hated this schoolmarm-scolding article too. She seems to have turned into Andy Rooney: "In my day we talked to the young-uns! Now everyone's plugged into those iPod things!"

Brought up all the crazed anxiety that made me read New Yorker articles aloud to my two-week-old in his swing, when all he wanted was for me to shut up and let him sleep.

Mary Helen

Oh my god. You? Are HILARIOUS.

Cookie

Darn it, I knew I was doing something wrong. Talk to the baby. I'm so glad this was brought to my attention. No wonder my children only grunt and point. I was too busy Facebooking and Tweeting and not talking. Love the snark!

Linda Noble

I was crying by the end of reading this because I was stifling my laugh here in the office! I could not have been as eloquent as you, my dear! All I could muster as a response would have been, "DUH!"

Jasie VanGesen

Oh my goodness... this was so biting and clever. My faith in all things Alice hath been restored... though with the addition of Let's Panic! I've been adequately entertained. Entertain us! It is your duty!

Kidding... sort of.

roo

Maybe the author needs people to verbally engage with her more consistently--
if she's decided to stop strange mothers in the street to commiserate over language skills, it sounds to me like she could use a few more friends.

Unfortunately for her, it doesn't seem as though in these dark days of Blackberrys and computers and other social ills, that many people are in the market for making friends with a judgmental, antiquated priss...

Karly

Apparently deaf parents must be horrible seeing as they can't talk to their kids AT ALL..

Martha

You have written many funny things, but this is one of the funniest!

madge

A perfect response to an IDIOTIC article. Shame on the Times for re-hashing early-80s parenting articles (and authors).

NicNovak

Ha ha ha ha ha!

Erika

Wow. I started that article, then stopped almost immediately. Thanks to you, I went back and read the whole thing.

Damn you, that's 2 minutes I'll never get back.

Kathy Ulrich

You are my hero in mommydom!

Melinda

Too funny! Congrats on the Redbook gig, can't wait to read what you write.

Fatemeh

Admittedly, I am missing something here since I'm not a parent, but...

... I guess I kind of read the column with interest because, well, I see this all the time, predominantly with nannies. I see the same little ones on walks in my neighborhood all the time, and there are two caregivers that NEVER seem to engage w/the kids. And granted, I'm seeing these people for 40 minutes a week or something, but it seems like a cautionary tale for parents? Maybe?

I dunno. I'd love enlightenment by you all since, well, not all parents are so intelligent*.

*Yes, I do see the irony in this column being published in the NY Times, arguably a thinking-person's newspaper.

Martini Mom

As if we needed proof that you earned that Redbook column. You are awesome.

carrie

I don't keep track of Jane Brody's articles, so maybe she's annoying in general. However, I wanted to point out that this - parents not talking to children - is a really big problem in low-income families. By first grade, kids from higher income families generally have a vocabulary that is twice as large as that of children from low-income families. This can set children from lower income families behind for life. The Children's Zone in Harlem is doing wonderful work addressing this issue with its Baby College. Part of the program emphasizes parents talking to children. When parents are working two or three jobs and barely see their kids, sometimes this activity slips through the cracks.

Jane Brody's advice is definitely geared to a higher-income crowd who probably find it common sense, so some snark is warranted. But, addressed in a different context and manner, such advice can change children's lives.

Sorry to be a stick in the mud! This issue is just of particular importance to me.

thatgirlblogs

we mostly communicate with our four using grunts and gestures, but the little buggers learned how to talk anyway.

I blame PBS.

Alice

I agree with the larger point, Carrie, and it's definitely a concern, but the way the issue was brought up was ridiculous.

She's acting as if she's identified a huge problem based on her own limited experience in her (I am assuming) high-income Brooklyn neighborhood.

As you said, it's the low-income families who are struggling who are more likely to have kids who suffer. More support for them, and light shed on their problem, would be a huge help. But she's pointing a finger at our Blackberry-and-iPod culture, making this a generational thing, and that's what I find ludicrous.

Erika

Fatemeh and Carrie, the science is sound, definitely. But she's so annoying in her delivery & self-righteous attitude that no one's going to pay attention. Also, do the men have no responsibility? I don't see them being criticized...

@marymac

Perfect response to heap of steaming condescension. Love it!
Congrats on Redbook!

Jenn Steele

Damn you. My potato(e) chips came out my nose when I read the point about Twitter.

The Diamond in the Window

Yes, her column pissed me off, not so much even with the talking as with the horrible horrible concept of congratulating some mother on doing a good job! Good job, Mommmy! Which just reeks of condescension and rivalry and the idea of mothering as something you are being judged about all the time, no matter what. Which, of course it is, but still.

Nicola Proctor

Oh, Alice! A girl after my own snarky heart. "My throat is raw from describing every damned thing I see." One of the funniest things you've ever written.

Amy --- Just A Titch

My love for you is growing exponentially. "The yellow face in the sky..."

Good lord, girl. You are FUNNY.

Lorie

Ms. Brody,
Talking to my child is nearly impossible to do with the crack pipe in my mouth. Sooooo....would it be ok if I just recorded other peoples conversations and laid the recorder next to her head. That way she can continue to hear voices all day, every day.

twitter.com/AnitaBonita

And this is why blogs are better than twitter.

I honestly can't talk that much to describe everything I see. It would bore the soul out of me. and if I heard another mother talking that much, I would slap her.

But the talking on the phone the whole time walking the stroller annoys me, too.

Many things annoy me. Which is why I should stay at home. In my house. With my twins by my side. While I check my email/twitter/blogs and say nothing. :-)

Susan

Of course I read the column in its entirety to my six-year-old and boy, did we ever learn a lot! For instance, when he referred to Ms. Brody as a Doodoo Head, I knew just what to do! "No, honey, we don't say Doodoo Head; we say Assmunch."

I think I'm really getting this parenting thing down. Thanks, Jane!

suburbancorrespondent

Personally, I liked her exulting over how her twin grandsons' stroller was stolen. Best thing that ever happened to them! she exults. Now they'll get more exercise!

I'm wondering if the boys' mother agrees with her....

Molly Chase

Holy shit, I'm supposed to be talking to them? AND listening when THEY talk? I know my 3-month old got my last tweet, and I read my 4-year-old's blog post last night, so, like...that's the same thing, right, Jane?

I read that article this morning and was thinking, God, who the hell does she think reads her stuff? And what did that Brooklyn mother think of being congratulated on talking to her kid?

Sarah

She clearly doesn't understand that ignoring them while they are babies is what they deserve, because when they are teenagers, you get no more than a grunt out of them while they text their friends and listen to music.

Nancy

As a former English teacher, a hearing-impaired person, the daughter of an audiologist and the stepdaughter of a speech pathologist, I was nodding my head affirmatively as I read.

As she said, Jane Brody was not commenting on every single parent but on those who seem to disengage from their kids on a regular basis in favor of the phone, the PDAs, etc. The thrust of the article is about language development, and as someone who taught in the inner city for seven years, I have seen the difference in the language development of kids whose parents engage them in regular conversation and those who don't-- some of it was cultural (kids should be seen, not heard, etc) but a lot of it had to with a lack of education and awareness.

I used to work for Jumpstart (jstart.org), a literacy enrichment program that works with Head Start children. Part of my job included giving parents suggestions for building literacy, like reading signs out loud as you walk down the street. In fact, there is a mother in my building, whose young children get therapy for speech and language delays, and she says that it's because "she didn't talk to them."

I'm just wondering why you (and other commenters) seem to be taking this so personally? It obviously doesn't apply to you, and I didn't think Brody's tone was any more condescending than any other columnist out there. I will be the first person to admit that I'm practically glued to my iPhone and I make a conscious effort to strike a balance between my own communication needs and that of my 14 month old (also named Alice, BTW!).

Nancy

Oh, I see now that my comment is redundant. Somehow, I missed the comment from Carrie and your follow-up. My bad.

Marcy

The thing I love about the woman pushing the stroller is that unless the kid can see BOTH mom's face AND what she's pointing at, all that babble will do very, very little to help her verbal skills (that's what all the latest research says, anyway). I always felt silly trying to talk to my kid while pushing his stroller because HE CAN'T SEE ME so how's he even supposed to know what I'm saying or that I'm even talking to him?

My guess is, there ARE lots of kids who don't get talked to enough, but it's because mom and dad are working 3 jobs and not because of too much computer time.

karen

Some of her article begs for translation:

Jane Brody says: One of my grandsons was a late-talker. When he wanted something to drink or eat, he went to the refrigerator or pantry and pointed. Our job was to ask, “Do you want water, milk or juice, cereal or raisins?” and wait for his response. When we guessed right, we reinforced the verbal message by saying, “Oh, you want cereal.”

Jane Brody means: If I don't do exactly what my daughter-in-law tells me to do, I will never see my grandchild. Why did my son have to marry that evil bitch?!

Jane Brody says: Count the steps as you go up or down. My twin grandsons’ math skills flourished long before they could speak in sentences because they live in a third-floor walk-up.

Jane Brody means: Why couldn't my daughter have married a doctor or lawyer who could afford an apartment in an elevator building?

Astrid

When I become a mom, I'm going to talk with my hand and I don't mean sign language.

I, Rodius

How dare you challenge the mighty NYT with your snarkasm?

Alice

Thanks for your comments, Nancy! There's clearly a real problem going on, but as I said before, it's her tone I couldn't stomach. And I just ran from there.

Also, it's the constant barrage of headlines about what moms are doing wrong really sticks in my craw. As @randomdeanna on Twitter observed, the next headline will be about the helicopter parents who talk too much to their kids. No matter what, we seem to be doing something wrong.

Ellen

I thought Brody very carefully used the word "parents" instead of moms -- even though her piece begins with a story of talking to a random mom and features a picture of a mother and child. What are you gonna do? There are a lot more women who are primary care givers and I'm fairly sure she didn't have editorial control over the picture.

Brody is also very careful to write:

"Not all parents, of course, are routinely tuning out their young children. Two of my female friends in their 30s who have toddlers talk to them, and with them, incessantly."

So, while I understand the snark -- and definitely expect the article about helicoptering parents to come in short haste -- I think Brody is largely correct. I live in her neighborhood and while it's tough to judge every person based on the snippets of time in which they walk past you on the phone, it does seem to add up to a lot of inane chatter. It seems the trick is to balance raising a child who knows that you're interested in his or her feelings with a sense, on the other hand, that they are not always the center of the world. Sometimes being ignored or left to let the mind wander can be a huge developmental tool, but I do believe we are headed in a direction where more and more parents spend more and more time on gadgets. That has to have some effect.

I agree that the lede seems pedantic. "I recently stopped to congratulate a young mother" for talking to her kid. It certainly comes across as "Oh thank, you great arbiter of parenting!"

But I would bet that she doesn't at all mean to imply that every parent use every technique she describes all of the time -- whew, that would be exhausting -- but if someone walked away from that piece and put down the phone for a few extra minutes a day, that might help. (The meta issue is that someone inclined to read an article such as this is probably already sensitive to the amount of time they spend on the phone versus the amount of time they spend engaging their kids. Hence, the offense taken by some here. A person who reads this probably doesn't need to be told what to do.)

I work in child development and I can't tell you the number of people who enter our center on their blue tooth headsets, still chatting as they strap a kid into a stroller or put them into a car seat. These are not low-income moms and dads. I just think the knee-jerk snark that picks away at the rest of her piece does a disservice to what is turning into a noticeable trend. Today's kid who watches his mom or dad chat away or scroll on the Blackberry becomes tomorrow's parent who does it even more.

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