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TM
Cross-Cultural Notes
A Child Psychiatrist Takes a Dip in the Pool
By Elizabeth Berger, M.D.
For many
tourists, the most stunning sight at the Puerto Vallarta Casa Magna Marriott
may be the "Infinity Pool" – a huge chest-high wading pool complete with
waterfall and bar that merges into the ocean view a few feet away. But what
drew me to its beach chairs day after day wasn't the magnificent view, the
attentive poolside waiters, or the cooling effects of the waters on the
midday heat of off-season summer travel. What kept me fascinated was a sight
stranger than fiction – families with small children getting along.
Having raised children myself and being familiar with
public spaces in the United States--beaches, restaurants, parks, or shopping
malls – I am accustomed to the sad and commonplace sight of parents at odds
with their children. Wherever there are large numbers of American children,
it seems that you are bound to observe a few of them wailing, parents out of
sorts, families arguing, sulking, or storming – and almost everywhere, the
sight of parents trying to "discipline" their children with punishments,
consequences, scolding, limit-setting, time-outs, and huge quantities of
frowns all around.
What astounded me in Mexico – during the summertime
"off-season" when few North Americans were present – was that the family
interactions seemed so very different. Although the pool was filled with
families and dozens of children of all ages, I only heard howling babies on
a tiny number of occasions. And each time, the cry of despair was brief –
because the infant was immediately scooped into arms and comforted with
passion and tenderness. To my wonderment, too, the arms were mostly Dad's.
Regardless of the alleged sex-role conventions of "traditional Latin
societies," the high degree of involvement of fathers with their children
off all ages at the pool in Mexico was very striking to me in its contrast
with a North American scene. Dads played with their kids – threw them in the
air, balanced them on their shoulders, and hugged and kissed them – with
evident joy and pride and pleasure. I did not get the feeling that these
Dads were "agreeing" to entertain their kids for a period of time, or
"agreeing" to take the kids off their Mom's hands for a while. I got the
feeling that these Dads thought that playing with their children was the
most natural and delightful and satisfying thing they could possibly be
doing. That for these Dads, this was what a vacation was all about.
The absence of conflict between siblings, and between
children playing in groups, was another astounding feature of this pool. The
older children and teenagers--rather than forming competing packs and
cliques – often carried the smaller tots on their hips and played with them
or taught them to swim. Rather than the "inevitable" fights and resentments
and bitterness, the difficulty sharing and taking turns, that one often sees
among groups of kids north of the border, these children laughed and played
together pleasantly hour after hour – and by our national standards, rather
quietly. These children seemed extraordinarily well behaved: friendly and
courteous with myself as a stranger with bad Spanish, kind and affectionate
with each other. Being gracious and polite--an important feature in Latino
society generally – didn’t appear to be something that parents "made" their
children do. It seemed to be the children's natural expectation of human
relationships.
Elizabeth Berger, M.D. is the author of Raising
Children with Character. Read more about it at
http://www.parentingbyheart.com
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