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Living with children
Pulling back the covers on sleep-overs
Rosemond John
John Rosemond

Q: My husband and I have decided that we do not want our children to participate in sleep-overs. We recently moved to a new community and are just making new friends and meeting new families. All of these parents, it seems, love to do sleep overs. We, however, are sticking by our guns. As a result our kids are beginning to feel left out.

What should I say to these other parents who think we’re crazy and their children who are making mine feel bad about it?

A: You never told me why you are so strongly opposed to sleep-overs. That suggests — but maybe I’m just playing psychologist here — that you think your objections are self-evident. If that’s the case, they are not self-evident to yours truly.

I have heard of problematic situations that arose during sleep-overs, but I fail to see the basis for a sweeping indictment. Pillow fights? That was a joke, of course. But seriously, I’m suffering from “possibilities block” here.
In my (naïve?) estimation, the issue is not sleep-overs per se; the issue is how well a given sleep-over is managed by the supervising parents.

Before letting a child attend a sleep-over, a finite set of “givens” should exist: First, you are more than just slightly familiar with the host parents and know them to be conscientious, responsible people; second, that they know how to quickly get in touch with you should that become necessary; third, that the sleep-over will be attended by only one gender; fourth, that siblings, especially if they are older than the attendees, will be kept at a distance (ideally, farmed out for the evening).

Your concern hints at a tendency to want to control everything that happens in your children’s lives. That’s called micro-management and I would be remiss if I failed to point out that parental micro-management always, without exception, creates huge problems of one sort or another in the long run. The problem is that micromanaging parents always, without exception, justify their anxiety-driven over-control. They also tend to think apocalyptically, as in, “If I let my child attend a sleep-over, some other child who comes from a family that does not share our beliefs may permanently corrupt my child’s values.”

In short, the fears that lie behind micro-management are rarely realistic. Plus, the parents in question fail to accept that they are not omnipotent, that try as hard as they might, they simply cannot control everything that happens in their kids’ lives.

When my wife and I were in our active parenting years, we would purposefully allow our children to get themselves entangled in certain problematic situations that we could have prevented. In other words, we managed risk for the purpose of helping our children learn, by trial and error, how to keep themselves out of trouble. The result was win-win: the kids enjoyed a good amount of freedom and we enjoyed the peace of mind of knowing that they were steadily coming to grips with the relationship between freedom and responsibility. Some lessons cannot be “talked into” a person.

Anyway, concerning this sleep-over issue, I’d take a deep breath and give it a go. Sounds like your kids need a break from your oversight. It also sounds like you and your husband could do with some parenting freedom as well.

Family psychologist John Rosemond: johnrosemond.com, parentguru.com.