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playdates | Jennifer S. White http://jenniferswhite.com Sat, 12 Sep 2015 16:23:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://jenniferswhite.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/cropped-jennbio-32x32.jpg playdates | Jennifer S. White http://jenniferswhite.com 32 32 62436753 The Saddest Part About Living in Our “Playdate Society.” http://jenniferswhite.com/the-saddest-part-about-living-in-our-playdate-society/ http://jenniferswhite.com/the-saddest-part-about-living-in-our-playdate-society/#comments Sat, 12 Sep 2015 13:29:48 +0000 http://jenniferswhite.com/?p=4375   Mostly, I played outside with other kids from my neighborhood—it’s what we did in the early 80’s. Yes, there was a small group of kids that were the children of a group of...

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Mostly, I played outside with other kids from my neighborhood—it’s what we did in the early 80’s.

Yes, there was a small group of kids that were the children of a group of teachers my mom taught with, and we would play in our sunny backyard in the summer, when our moms weren’t working, but, generally, I played with other kids in my neighborhood.

I don’t live in a neighborhood. Instead, I live up on a hill on a couple of acres, in a semi-rural setting. Yet even if I did live in a house next to others like it, not much would be different.

My friends who live in subdivisions have the same “problem” that I do: we have to create “playdates” for our kids to have any friends.

It’s unfair, really; it’s unfair to all involved.

My child has relatively no friends compared to my own little childhood gang, because if our parents were friends then that was a perk rather than a necessary component to my getting to play with other kids my age.

Yet society—and, in particular, mommyhood—has comfortably moved entirely away from hanging out with the kid down the street and to this playdate mentality, where we need to invite people with other children over for a short span of hours.

We are supposed to then engage in slightly awkward small talk while our children interact. Afterward, we part and go back home, across town, or to different towns.

The best parts of playing outside as a kid were those times when the sun would dip down and the sky would begin to get dark. Hide-and-go-seek was much more fun then, as was just about any game, because it was that perfect evening light and it always cooled down just a touch.

In the winter, in Ohio at least, the snow would at times be furious, and my friend across the street would come over to cozily play dolls upstairs on the softly carpeted balcony outside of my bedroom. She, my twin sister and I were the best of friends and, all of these years later, we’re still close—and I only remember our moms spending time together a handful of moments.

But I’m not saying that there’s anything wrong with our “playdate society,” or that I expect things to go backward and be different—I know that they can’t.

Regardless, I do feel sorry for my daughter; that she’s missing out on close-knit friends—and I feel bad because it feels like my fault.

She doesn’t have friends because I don’t—this is how modern motherhood feels.

She doesn’t have other little girls that she’s known since she was four, because of me.

Yet my own long-term friendships were all formed around us being neighbors and playing together, not because we had to at our scheduled time, but because we wanted to—and that’s the saddest thing of all.

We no longer live in a world where we send our kids out on bikes, with curfews of “before dark.” Whether we like it or not, the world is noticeably scarier than it was in the 80’s.

To be fair, it wasn’t perfect then either, but many things, including the internet, have led to a culture where we simply know more about things like crime; about what’s going on in the world, outside of our (unlocked) front doors, and, unlike neon colors and androgynous pantsuits, the 80’s aren’t coming back—and “playdates” are likely here to stay.

Still, when I look at my daughter playing with her baby sister and reading to her dolls, I can’t help but feel a pang of remorse when, for the umpteenth time, my baby’s nap time didn’t mesh with another mother’s, or I pick up my kid from school at this time, when she’s free, and, finally, we just altogether give up trying to “play.”

I miss having what I’ve never personally had: a group of children running around my backyard, with another mom somewhere in her own house looking out at them. Every time I question whether or not it’s my living up on a quiet hill that has caused this, I speak with other moms who have neighbors a lemonade cup’s throw away, who still are going on “playdates.”

Yes, we all know people who live in that one, quaint American neighborhood, who still leave their doors unlocked and let their kids ride bikes down the street to so-and-so’s house, but, for the most part, this is not what our kids’ childhoods look like anymore.

Instead, we have ongoing discussions about things like, is wine appropriate for mothers on playdates? Can you come over while the baby naps? I only have from 2 to 4 o’clock on Tuesday, or after 10 on Wednesday, but before I take so-and-so to such-and-such.

The world is different from when I was small. My children’s early lives are vastly different too.

For the most part, I’m okay with that, but sometimes I’m not, and when I think about that one little, gleaming seed of truth at the heart of why, it’s often because I don’t think it’s “fair” that I have to be a popular playdate mom for my kid to have some friends.

But I’ll keep on trying.

I’ll keep trying to meet other people with kids of similar ages.

I’ll keep uncomfortably putting myself out there to people I otherwise wouldn’t. I’ll keep wishing, also, in my mommy-heart of hearts, that my social butterfly of a daughter had more area to fly, but, in addition, I’ll store away for later the reality that, yes, her childhood in a snapshot is totally unlike my Polaroids—but she doesn’t know any different.

I’m comparing what I had to what she’ll probably never have, and so she doesn’t even miss it and, as it turns out, that’s the saddest thing of all.

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