jazzfish: Owly, reading (Owly)
[personal profile] jazzfish
... good thing I don't have to do it.

Elseweb a friend asks, heavily paraphrased, "my preteen kid wants to read Hunger Games. i'm not letting her right now, because she's hypersensitive and it would freak her right the heck out. thoughts?"

Which to me sounds entirely wrong-headed. I was brought up with free rein in my reading material: if I could reach it, I could (try to) read it. The notion of telling a kid "no you can't read that you're not ready for it" is foreign to me. I could see "it's kinda disturbing and might be a little old for you; give it a try and we'll talk about it during/after, and if you're too freaked out it's totally okay to stop." But saying "you can't read that"... does that ever end well?

This is apart from the question of poisonous drek like Twilight, which someone else brings up in comments and to which I have no easy answer.

Thoughts?

(I'm not identifying the friend because I don't want to be That Guy With No Kids Who's Telling Her How To Raise Hers; likewise, I'm not asking her this directly because I don't know how to ask that without either sounding like That Guy Etc or making it her job to educate me on the nuances of parenting that I'm missing.)

Date: 2012-08-14 08:37 pm (UTC)
thanate: (bluehair)
From: [personal profile] thanate
I think this is the direction I'd go in with this also; I was never censored with reading material, although there were a handful of things that various people (both friends & parents) disrecommended for various reasons. ("You should wait until you're older and will get more of the literary references," is the one I particularly remember from my parents-- who at that point had already spoiled me for most of the humor in Gilbert & Sullivan by making it commonplace. But I digress.) The things I would have been happier not having read as a kid were either stuff for school (Animal Farm comes to mind) or not anything anyone else had volunteered an opinion on (mostly things with graphic sexual moments, and that was when I was old enough most people wouldn't have censored me anyhow.)

However... my parents took us to see Indianna Jones & the Temple of Doom when it came out, thinking it was going to be a fun action movie. As far as I know, my little brother didn't have any problem with it, but as a 5th grader I had night-terror style insomnia for the next nine months. I vividly remember being awake until about 4am the night after seeing it because every time I shut my eyes I kept seeing skulls, or that scene with drinking from the wrong grail.

Now, for me that was largely a visual media problem, and I don't think there was any real way that anyone could have predicted my reaction. But if as a parent one is in a situation to predict what's going to traumatize a kid, I think there's at least a slight obligation to try to head them off. The method is going to differ from kid to kid, of course, and I think a lot of times explaining in advance why it's horrible may work better than a ban-- at that point even if they do go ahead and read it they're a little more prepared for what they're getting into. But it depends on the kid, and I agree that there's potentially an element of safety in "My mom says I'm not allowed to read this yet," that isn't there in a more laid back approach.

Date: 2012-08-14 09:02 pm (UTC)
fadeaccompli: (Default)
From: [personal profile] fadeaccompli
Oh, yes. There were also times in purely social situations where I was deeply grateful for "My parents say I can't do that" as an excuse for staying out of something I didn't want to do anyway, and didn't feel comfortable articulating my fear or discomfort around. But I suppose that's a more general parenting issue, of which reading is sort of a subset.

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"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

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