Monday, May 2, 2022

Opinion Today: Would you be OK with your kid skipping school?

… and asking you for permission beforehand?
Author Headshot

By Indrani Sen

Culture Editor, Opinion

At a weeknight family dinner in March, the journalist Matt Gross's 13-year-old daughter, Sasha, asked her parents for permission to skip school.

Matt and his wife told her no, as he wrote in a guest essay: "You just can't. Not allowed. Nope!" But then he offered his daughter a bit of unsolicited advice:

Next time you want to skip school, don't tell your parents. Just go. Browse vintage stores, eat your favorite snack (onigiri), lie on your back in Prospect Park and stare at the clouds. Isn't that the point of skipping school, after all? To sneak around, to steal time and space back from the arbitrary system that enfolds you? To hell with permission! That's being a teenager — carving out a private life for yourself under the noses of the authority figures who surround you.

I'm a little in awe of Matt's parental grace. The ways in which my 6- and 9-year-old boys have asserted their independence have been relatively tame so far: their refusal to get haircuts, resulting in shaggy mops of hair that they're perennially "growing out"; the little one's insistence on wearing a beige silk necktie over a pajama top to school; the big one's love for video games where a lot of bashing and biffing happens.

Bigger provocations are surely ahead, and remembering some of the risky and ridiculous things I did as a teenager, I worry that I won't show the restraint that Matt counsels. But I hope I will be able to trust my children's judgment. I agree wholeheartedly with Matt when he says, "I want them to navigate this huge, messy planet on their own, when they're old enough to — and be ready for things not to go their way."

Still, I couldn't help but giggle when I got the following text messages from Matt, after his essay was written and edited:

Matt may not have expected or wanted Sasha to take his advice quite so soon. But as he suggests in his essay, our children will not — should not — always do what we want them to do, what we think is good for them. They are, he writes, "not precious innocents to be culturally cocooned, but thinking, feeling, increasingly independent human beings who are busy making up their own minds."

I asked Matt whether he was angry with Sasha when she told him she'd skipped school. "Not at all," he replied. "In fact, I don't know if I believe her. Which is kinda cool in a way. She has her own mysteries."

ADVERTISEMENT

Here's what we're focusing on today:

Ideas

Guest Essay

What American Mothers Really Need

If red-state legislators truly want to limit abortions — legal and illegal — they must create conditions that give women a genuine choice.

By Margaret Renkl

Article Image

Guest Essay

How to Pray to a God You Don't Believe In

I like my religion inscrutable.

By Scott Hershovitz

Article Image

Guest Essay

A Plan to Help Kids Without Increasing Inflation

Lawmakers should make the Child Tax Credit available to families with low or no earnings. There's a way to do this without adding to inflation.

By Robert E. Rubin and Jacob J. Lew

Article Image

Tish Harrison Warren

We're in a Loneliness Crisis: Another Reason to Get Off Our Phones

We need to reconnect with material things: nature, soil, our bodies and other people in real life.

By Tish Harrison Warren

Article Image

Guest Essay

The Party of Big Business Is Getting More Anti-Conservative by the Day

Ron DeSantis and others are desecrating what the G.O.P. long championed.

By Stephanie Slade

Article Image

Guest Essay

If You're Anxious About the Climate, Try This

Wynn Bruce's death can teach us that climate anxiety and despair can be channeled into constructive action.

By Margaret Klein Salamon

Article Image

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe Today

New York Times Opinion curates a wide range of views, inviting rich discussion and debate that helps readers analyze the world. This work is made possible with the support of subscribers. Please consider subscribing to The Times with this special offer.

ADVERTISEMENT

Games Here is today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Forward this newsletter to friends to share ideas and perspectives that will help inform their lives. They can sign up here. Do you have feedback? Email us at opiniontoday@nytimes.com.

Contact us If you have questions about your Times account, delivery problems or other issues, visit our Help Page or contact The Times.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for the Opinion Today or Sunday Best newsletters from The New York Times.

To stop receiving these emails, unsubscribe or manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No comments:

Post a Comment