In September of 1959, American writer Susan Sontag—who was also then a mother to a seven-year-old boy, David Rieff—listed her 10 rules for raising a child. The rules have just been published by The Atlantic, and are:
- Be consistent.
- Don't speak about him to others (e.g., tell funny things) in his presence. (Don't make him self-conscious.)
- Don't praise him for something I wouldn't always accept as good.
- Don't reprimand him harshly for something he's been allowed to do.
- Daily routine: eating, homework, bath, teeth, room, story, bed.
- Don't allow him to monopolize me when I am with other people.
- Always speak well of his pop. (No faces, sighs, impatience, etc.)
- Do not discourage childish fantasies.
- Make him aware that there is a grown-up world that's none of his business.
- Don't assume that what I don't like to do (bath, hairwash) he won't like either.
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