From the Archive: Your Best Parenting Advice
ParentData is 3! đ
Three years ago yesterday was my first newsletter post, which covered antibiotics and allergies, Zika, and the best travel baby carrier. It starts with: âLately, I feel that itâs hard to avoid discussions of the microbiome.â This is still true! People are still very into the microbiome.Â
Many things have changed. The email list is 80 times larger. Weâve been through COVID and are mostly out on the other side. Some things havenât changed: in a real sense, Iâm back to what I thought the newsletter would be when I began this journey. I still stand behind that travel baby carrier recommendation (the Bitybean).Â
Today, to mark the occasion, I wanted to return to one of my favorite early posts â your best parenting advice. A version of this post originally ran in June 2021, and it crowdsourced parenting advice from all of you. I thought it was absolutely great. The results are below.Â
When reviewing this, our team realized that there was so much more in the advice we got than was surfaced in the original post. We wanted more! So we put together a spreadsheet with all of your answers from back then (take a look here). And weâd also love to invite you to share your best parenting advice now (and its source) in the comments.Â
Thanks for all your support over the past three years, and hopefully many more to come.
We all get a lot of parenting advice. Much of it, as a friend of mine often says, âis worth what you pay for it.â But is there any actual good advice? At the end of Cribsheet, I talk about the best parenting advice Iâve gotten â from our first pediatrician â which boiled down to: try not to think about it. Part of the reason this was the best advice for me is that I think about everything far, far too much.
But I got to wondering: is there anything systematic about the best advice? Is there some universal best advice, or is the best advice different for us all? Of course, the only way to answer is with data. So I did a little survey, and about 350 people weighed in with answers to two simple questions: Whatâs the best parenting advice youâve gotten, and who gave it to you?
The best advice
Some of your best advice goes for the very practical. Here are a few of those that I think we can all use.
Frozen mini bagels make the worldâs best teething rings. Theyâre cold but also tasty.Â
When out with a stroller â reverse through doors.Â
To reset, put babies in water or bring them outside.
Read the manuals for baby gear you get before the baby arrives. (Ed. note: This reminded me of the time Jesse almost threw the snap-and-go base into Lake Michigan when we couldnât fold it up after the first pediatrician visit. Ah, memories.)
Use dye-free Tylenol so it doesnât stain anything when they vomit it back up.Â
The shoulders in the onesie are so you can pull it down when thereâs a poopsplosion.
But most of the best advice was more general â more about how to approach parenting, rather than literally how to deal with a mess. To attempt to summarize this a bit better, I coded the responses into categories and put them in a pie chart.
The Winner: The most popular category of advice was what I call âItâs a phase,â which 16% of people said some version of. The main tenor was, as one person said: âIt will pass. Bad things (and good things) last two weeks max.â
I found this really resonant. So much of early parenting in particular feels eternal in the hard moments, and there is something so helpful in recognizing that it will end. You wonât be (this) tired forever, your child will not have this type of tantrum forever, they will eventually poop alone. A natural implication is to try to enjoy the good parts of right now, and not despair at the tough ones.
Just relax: A lot of responses centered around a version of âIt will be fineâ or âDo what works.â The message was some combination of âDonât sweat the small stuffâ and that you cannot be ruled by the advice of others (e.g. âThey can have an opinion, but they donât get a voteâ). Another piece of this is letting yourself off the hook (e.g. if you feel youâve got it 60% right, itâs a good day!).
I also got this gem: âThe only fracture that canât wait until morning is an elbow â so if it ainât an elbow, and the child is comfortable, no need for the ER at night.â
Value yourself: As parents, we are not always the best at recognizing that we â or our relationship â needs attention too. A number of people pointed to advice from others to put themselves first, at least some of the time. âYou have to take care of yourself first so you can best take care of your baby â the airline/oxygen mask rule.â More concretely: âGo to therapy.â
Beyond yourself, people gave advice about prioritizing your relationship with your partner, if you have one. As one person put it: âYour spouse is not the enemy; the baby is the enemy.âÂ
Sleep-related: And finally, in the big categories: sleep. Many of us benefit from advice on sleep. I know what youâre thinking â what is the advice? Tell me right now. However, there wasnât one distinct type of advice. The âbestâ advice came in the form of bedtime routines, encouragement to sleep train, permission to co-sleep, and embracing the concept of âwake windows.â Sleep training came in, in this group, for the most positive votes, but Iâm guessing that reflects my audience.
Summary: This was fun to read! I definitely learned some things (e.g. the thing about fractured elbows). In very broad strokes, my read of much of this is some version of: have perspective and play the long game. A hard thing to remember when youâre in the weeds, especially early on, but a good one.
The best advice givers
Whoâs the best advice giver? I made a word cloud. Moms, friends, pediatricians, and therapists for the win. Colleagues, books, aunts, and siblings come in next. Oh, and Instagram. Shout-out to the Cup of Jo account, which was the most commonly mentioned.
A final note
I will leave you with this piece of best advice to contemplate:
âIf one is to be a parent, one must adopt the disposition of a placid cow.â
MoooâŠ
The most practical advice: layer mattress protector, then sheet, then second mattress protector, then sheet on the crib mattress. That way when there's a middle of the night blowout you can just strip off the outer two layers.
Happy #3 ParentData team! Thank you for all you do.
For The Advice Cards At Baby Showers, by Kate Baer:
âBaby socks don't matter, but more importantly-neither does advice. This is not a performance for your friend or your mother or the woman in line who tells you about coats. Experience will teach you two things: you are the mother and it's okay to let them go up the slide. Nothing in this world can prepare you for this love's suffering. For joy and loneliness.
For now just remember: birds sing, babies cry, and no matter the weather, every morning is new.â