“Becoming a grown-up is the second-most expensive mistake you’ll ever make. The first is having a kid.” - chapter 5
If you follow James Breakwell on social media, then you know his sense of humor.
If not, then you’re in for a hilarious ride.
While I have the physical book, I read this in Breakwell’s voice. It reads as he talks, as he tweets, as he posts. There are many, many hilarious moments, broken with some serious and legitimate points. This “unbook” to parenting is a must-have for anyone with any number of children.
Or, in my case, someone who teaches them. And as a non-parent teacher, I whole-heartedly approve of the overall message for parents to sometimes just CHILL BACK. Do not be an overbearing, overachieving (albeit, not an UNDERachieving either) parent.
Have a drink. Have a laugh.
Take a step back and look at the big picture.
Breakwell reminds us that there is no perfect time to have a child. And there is no perfect way of parenting. After all, none of them will be “the Chosen One,” and everyone ends up the same (in a way), anyway. You don’t know which adults were natural births or C-sections; who was or was not breastfed; who co-slept and who didn’t.
His Christianity is evident to someone who knows what to look for. After all, Breakwell talks about the pros and cons of having a child at various times of one’s life, from being a teen to being erm… “old as hell” (aka, over 50).
His geekery/pop culture knowledge is evident in how he talks about ‘Star Wars,’ Middle Earth, Cthulhu, and video games.
I cried from laughing so hard.
I have so many things quoted that I might as well retype the book as one stupendous quote.
Chapter 3 was utterly hilarious from the first sentence.
Provided your child doesn’t blame you for all that goes wrong in their life, you have a good future in store for you.
The more money you have, the more complaints you have.
The more money you have, the more you’ll spend on “better” baby items.
Welcome to the monetarily poorest days of life.
I love that he describes pros and cons of many things, from having more than one child (entertainment and saving money on hand-me-downs), to taking pictures (they have to know they were loved), to education, to food choices.
With education, there is an absolutely great reminder that stats are ‘averages,’ and any individual child should not be measured against those stats. Focus on your own kid. Plus, a lot of the stats are steeped in money, and a knowledge base is contributed to by many other factors.