8 Common Parenting Mistakes Almost All Indian Parents Are Guilty Of Making


8 Common Parenting Mistakes Almost All Indian Parents Are Guilty Of Making

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Now, as much as we love our parents, there are times they really should take, as King Khan so eloquently put it in Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham, a “chill pill”. You see, in India, no matter how


old your child is, he or she is still your ‘Raja/Rani beta/beti’, which, while flattering, is not always convenient for us kids. So, here are 8 common parenting mistakes almost all Indian


parents make.


Because there are no writers, musicians, designers, mechanics, CAs, lawyers, hotel owners, HR professionals, advertising executives, travel guides, air hostesses, pilots or people pursuing


sundry careers in the world.


Note: retorting by mentioning that the kid in question (Sharma ji’s spawn, that is) is actually not their child does not help.


Are you sure you scaled mountains to get to school or did it only seem so because you didn’t have a phone with podcasts on it?


Because choosing a career based on your strengths and interests is unrealistic, but adopting a child and hiding him away for his entire life isn’t.


Just because your children use pens in their notebooks instead of pencils doesn’t mean their pickiness with food will change. Children experience a second growth spurt between the ages of


8-15 years, which is why it is particularly important to see whether they’re getting the required nutrients to support this growth. Here’s where switching to milk mixes like Protinex Grow,


which contains twice the amount of protein than regular mixes, thereby helping kids to fulfill their daily protein requirement, comes in handy.


Listen, if we don’t have problems every once in a while, are we even human? Depression among children and adolescents is a growing concern, and those suffering from it need support, not


rebukes labeling their problems as ‘tantrums’.


All through high school and college, too often did I come across children who took a certain course because their parents pushed them into it. The logic behind it was even more absurd: the


parents wanted the kid to fulfill the dreams they couldn’t. Disappointments and failures are nothing new to anyone who is old enough to understand the gist of life, but they are not licenses


to disregard your children’s wishes and force them into pursuing something they dislike.


Let’s get this straight: we are millennials, so we won’t hesitate from calling our parents out on the glaringly obvious ways girls are subjected to policing in India. Over time, though, that


sexism has cloaked itself in nuances. Some exhibits: ‘Papa se pucho’, ‘Ye line ladkiyon ke liye fit nahi hai’, ‘Bossy mat bano.’