Why I’m raising my kids to be wildflowers

It may seem like the last thing the world needs is another parenting style. There is attachment parenting and peaceful parenting; helicopter parenting and slow parenting; tiger parenting and elephant parenting; RIE parenting and the CTFD method. I’m going to sweep these aside for a moment and focus on an analogy: Raising kids is like raising wildflowers.

Wildflowers are not easy to grow

A lot of people think wildflowers are easy to grow. This is a common misconception among non-gardeners, not unlike the way some people think raising kids is easy before they have children of their own. According to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, what wildflowers need to thrive is “a considerable amount of early attention, and most of all patience.” In fact, “you should not expect to see blooms the first year, or even the second year with some species. But the reward is well worth the work and the wait.” Sounds a lot like parenting, right? LOTS of early attention. SO MUCH patience. Sometimes it feels like you will never see the blooms. But then you catch just a small glimpse of a bloom and it feels pretty amazing.

Wildflowers are resilient and adaptable

Once established, wildflowers are strong and resilient. Once you get past the early years, they don’t require constant attention. They can thrive in environments that would destroy other, more delicate flowers. You can find wildflowers peeking out from the dry cracks of desert ground, creating colorful displays in wet marshlands, and thriving in all conditions in between. Wildflowers have an astounding ability to adapt to their environments and are among the first plants to survive and thrive when the environment changes.

Another species with a remarkable ability to adapt to changing conditions is humans. Although our brains and biology prepare us for life in hunter-gatherer tribes – the life we lived for about 90% of our existence as a species – we’ve been able to adapt to numerous changes in the organization of life, from the agricultural revolution to the industrial revolution to the digital revolution. The change of pace has never been more rapid than it is today, which means that the ability to adapt to new conditions has never been more important. Thankfully, wildflowers are well-equipped to do this, given the right start in life.

Julie Lythcott-Haims, Stanford University’s former freshman dean of students and author of How to Raise an Adult, tells the story of parenting her two boys at an early age. She began her parenting years expecting the work of motherhood to be similar to a gardener shaping bonsai trees – constantly working to clip and prune them into perfect, pre-determined forms. After working with thousands of other people’s kids as they were entering college, though, she realized the bonsai method wasn’t the type of parenting that produced successful kids. Kids aren’t bonsai trees. They can’t be shaped into someone else’s idea of what they should look like. Kids need room to grow freely, explore, learn about their environment, and become their “glorious selves.” They are wildflowers.

Wildflowers make the world beautiful

Wildflowers are part of a complex ecosystem that makes life possible, and along the way, more beautiful. Their beauty lies in being exactly who they are supposed to be. Some wildflowers are brightly colored, and others are subtler in their appearance. Some reach for the sky and others stay close to the earth. Some flower early in the season and others late. They turn out exactly how they should, and no one needs to stand over them, pruning and weeding and watering and pushing them to try to be just a little more brightly colored or to stop standing out so much. Wildflowers were never meant to be a perfectly manicured garden. And that’s what makes them beautiful.

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8 thoughts on “Why I’m raising my kids to be wildflowers

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  1. Simply beautiful! I love the analogy.. good luck with your blog. I will be following along the way 🙂

    Like

  2. I love this Nina, it is so inspiring!
    I have often used a flower 🌸 or a plant analogy to explain my parenting philosophy to people that have questioned it, I have tackled it from different angles. Yours above embodies what parenting should be, further more what society should be towards our children, we should act as nature facilitators, making sure our seeds land in The right spot and have the right conditions to grow the way they’re meant to .
    Thanks Nina🌸

    Liked by 1 person

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