I really enjoyed this book: light and funny read!
I am personally a French mom living in the US and this is the first book I read on comparing the 2 cultures parenting mode.
I think we would translate Parenting as Education.
I would say this is a book from an American mom who starts comparing her parenting to other parents (who happen to be French) and it is about her journey to find balance in her life.
In no way, I find French parenting better than American and I would say neither does she. I rather believe she is like most parents figuring things out as she goes and when she finds herself in an extreme, tries to correct it. And she was stuck in many extremes!
I do not know if this is representative of NYC parents but I am pretty sure it is not representative of all American families. Actually I think there are plenty families like hers in France as well. Parents with good intentions but weak skills who will do worse for their kids than they think...
But parenting is a complex exercise and you must be willing to challenge your ways a bit to progress. I think that’s what she is doing... she believes she is being French but I think she is being old-French :-) and probably old-American (she confesses she was raised in a similar way)
I did appreciate that she mentioned areas where she disagrees with French approach: corporal punishment still being used and not being a good solution. She also visited some schools or interviewed Americans in France. Schools education or parenting can still be very direct and sometimes humiliating.
=====
The author lives with husband and 2 daughters in Brooklyn, where many French families live.
When invited by some French friends, she notices their kids behave better than hers... Since she’s tired, stressed by her kids, she is intrigued by new parenting ways and starts investigating and when she can... applying.
One of the main differences she notices is French tend to keep pregnancy and parenting simple and relaxed whereas Americans have fear of everything: some soon-to-be parents and their doctors do not forbid alcohol or all food, but have a more moderate message (even though it is not true everywhere).
Americans also want to buy everything (She did not say it but I will: probably enforced by marketing campaigns, messages about kids' growth and making sure parents are scared of doing the wrong things...). One thing I had never heard of before reading this book was wipe warmers 😁In general, we do not want to protect our kids from everything... life is unfair and sometimes difficult, let’s not lie to our kids about that... and feeling cold from time to time does not hurt ☺️
Another important aspect is French parents consider themselves the chief (boss) and not their kids. And this is strongly ingrained for sure. She finds French kids behave better in public.
There are instances where kids have free play but when French go to restaurants or visit someone, they expect their children to be quiet and polite. (Well probably less for me since I moved to the US).
She is also right about Americans trend to be helicopter or lawn mower parents. French tend to let theirs kids figure things out and “if no blood don’t get up”. French tend to let things go as “this is probably just a phase “ (as one nanny told me: “have you ever seen an adult with a pacifier?”)
In the US, she insists once the kid is born, everything revolves around him/her whereas French parents tend not to like breastfeeding over 6 months, French moms "re-appropriate" their bodies, try to keep dates with husbands (hum hum not so much for us) and in general try to let kid live by him/herself. We are not worried about our kid's development if he/she goes to daycare or nanny, rather than staying at home.
On our side, we kept our habits pre-kid but adjusted them slightly so it is adapted to a young child (drink to a kid-friendly bar, restaurant, travel -our son was just over 1 when we flew from Nice, Fr to San Francisco, Usa).
French kids have smaller birthday parties, less toys, less tv, and rather must find games or keep busy by themselves.
She has a whole section on style (how French kids are dressed): but I would say this really depends who she frequented: Parisians may be more inclined to be well dressed, and I definitely have friends who pay attention than me to these things. But living in Tucson, my son only wears sneakers, sweatpants or shorts and t-shirts 350 days a year 😂
The final most important topic is food... of course.
That’s for sure is sacred for French... she’s astonished by french kids manners, eating same food as adults, waiting patiently through 3-course meals. Some families she met involve theirs kids in meal planning and preparation. She did notice expats may push it further than in France... and well that’s true (I bake my own baguettes, dough when I would never do that in France).
And it is true French cafeteria at schools must provide healthy food.
So yeah food education is part of our DNA :-)