❌

Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

My son stayed home alone at 7 and biked across town by his tweens. I don't regret giving him so much independence.

Julie Royce sitting next to her son on a blanket in a park
Taken at Pease Park in Austin. My son is 19 in this picture and still indulges me for family pics.

Courtesy of Julie Royce

  • I am a single mom and allowed my son a lot of independence growing up.
  • I was leaving him home alone when he was 7. By his tweens, he was navigating the city on his own.
  • My parenting may be unconventional but it worked because of how I raised him at a young age.

I wanted my kid to have many of the same freedoms I had growing up in the '80s in the country β€” full of tree climbing, go-cart driving, and playing outside until the lights came on. My parents were relatively carefree and let us roam with minimal supervision, as long as our chores were done.

By the time my baby boy was 18 months old, I was a working single mother in the city and his sole provider, which meant my approach to parenting was going to take a different direction than I had imagined.

I didn't have the luxury of a partner for help, so I was constantly on duty. In order to coexist peacefully, I needed my son's cooperation, especially since he had a fierce need for independence at a young age.

I let him problem-solve, which sometimes led to a skinned knee

child climbing ladder
My son (not shown here) was one of the youngest to climb the ladder at our local playground.

d3sign/Getty Images

Cooperation required clear, age-appropriate communication of my expectations for him and his capabilities.

When he was 2, he was one of the youngest in our local park to climb the Jacob's Ladder. When he would get stuck at the top, I would explain to him that if he could get to the top by himself, he had to be able to get down by himself, too.

He soon became aware of his limitations and strengths. He would occasionally fall and skin his knee or the palm of his hand, but this never deterred him from going back for another climbing round.

Just because he got scuffed up a bit didn't mean I wasn't diligent about paying attention to him β€” I just let him problem-solve on his own through gentle encouragement and minimal interference.

With this approach, I successfully kept him out of the ER despite multiple spills off his skateboard and jumping from the top of the jungle gym.

The day I'll never forget

Julie Royce with her son covered in face paint to look like a green monster
Jude was 4 in this pic and insisted on being a dragon that day "because he felt fiery."

Courtesy of Julie Royce

While I encouraged him to be independent and self-confident, I still felt the need to keep him close when he was a child.

That's why I'll never forget the day when he was 7 and ventured to his friend's home alone without telling me.

He scootered down one of the busiest streets in the city and crossed a huge intersection to get there.

I thought he was in our condo complex riding his scooter. When he called me 30 minutes later to tell me he was at his friend's house, I asked him why he hadn't told me where he was going.

He said it was because he knew I wouldn't have let him go alone. He was right.

Then he added that I'd taught him how to push the crosswalk button and he knew what he was doing. It dawned on me that he was also right about that.

That day, my trust in his abilities grew exponentially. I began letting him stay home while I ran errands.

By his tween years, he was confidently navigating the city bus system and biking across town β€” activities none of his friends were doing.

Other parents often questioned my free-range parenting approach, but I wasn't concerned. We had a reliable check-in system, and I trusted him completely.

I set clear boundaries and delivered consequences if he broke the rules, like if he didn't call me as soon as he arrived somewhere, he wasn't allowed to go again.

I don't regret how I raised my son

Julie Royce stands with adolescent son against a green wall that has "i love you so much" written in cursive
My 13-year-old son and I stand next to an iconic landmark in Austin on the side of Jo's Coffeeshop.

Courtesy of Julie Royce

My style might have been unconventional, but now, at 19, he's still marching to the beat of his own drum and we have a strong and trusting relationship.

Watching him fly the coop with the tools and confidence I instilled is one of the greatest achievements of my life, and I can't wait to see where the next 20 years will take him.

Read the original article on Business Insider

I had never traveled overseas. At age 21, I moved from the US to Germany to be an au pair.

Mother and two young children sitting together on sofa
The author (not pictured) took care of two German kids as an au pair, and loved it.

PhotoAlto/Eric Audras/Getty Images/PhotoAlto

  • In 2000, I moved from the US to Germany after taking a job as an au pair.
  • I had never been overseas, and it seemed exciting and new.
  • I traveled around Europe with my family and even picked up some German.

I grew up in a small Texas town and had seen much of the United States. I had even traveled to Canada as a child, but I had never been overseas.

One day, I was chatting with a coworker who spent each summer as a nanny in various European countries. It seemed exciting and different, and I needed that change. My hometown felt stifling, and I knew if I wanted to see the world for an extended period, I'd likely have to work while doing it.

I got the contact information for the London-based agency that pairs young women with families across Europe for a year. In 2000, I took a job as an au pair in Germany.

It was the biggest leap of faith I had ever taken, and I'm glad I did.

I knew how to take care of kids

On the agency's website, I selected my top four countries, the size of the family I wanted to work for, and my childcare experience. By then, I had been babysitting for almost a decade and knew how to care for babies and young children, thanks to church youth groups and my own large family.

The agency considered my background and, over several more weeks, paired me with families in the Netherlands, Australia, and Germany. After many conversations with the respective parents, I decided to work for a German family with two kids, a 7-year-old boy and a 5-year-old girl. I signed the contract, got my first passport, secured my work visa, bought airline tickets, and planned to start in August 2000.

I didn't tell my parents

I did all of this without telling my parents, only confiding in my best friend and sister. I had set my mind on an adventure and didn't want anyone talking me out of it. As my mom often says, "Julie marches to the beat of her own drum, and when she decides something, no one can change it."

But as the departure date neared, nerves set in. Had I made the right choice? I knew no one in Germany and didn't speak the language. I took Spanish in high school, not German β€” what was I thinking?

Language wouldn't be an issue with the family, though. The children spoke English, and the parents wanted a native English speaker to help with their progress. However, I'd also be responsible for household tasks like shopping, taking the kids to school and other activities, and interacting with other families who may not speak English. Doubts started creeping in.

I packed everything I could bring

I landed at DΓΌsseldorf Airport, tired but wired, dragging along the biggest suitcase you've ever seen. Unsure of what to pack for a year abroad, I brought everything, including my favorite books, for comfort. My host mother and her son picked me up, and we drove to what would be my new home in Hagen, Germany.

Entering their neighborhood felt like stepping into a fairytale. The lush lawns and European-style homes were unlike anything I'd seen in Texas. I loved it! But I still wondered if the family would be as lovely as their neighborhood.

It was the experience of a lifetime

The first few weeks were calm as I got to know the family and learned their expectations. I immediately bonded with the son over "The Hobbit," "Harry Potter," and his love for "Magnum P.I.," but the 5-year-old daughter was a tougher challenge.

Living as a full-time caregiver made it feel different from regular babysitting, where I could leave at the end of the night. Here, it was my job from 7 a.m. until bedtime, six days a week. We eventually developed a routine of mutual respect, despite the occasional meltdowns and the very public "you're not the boss of me" moments.

A few months in, I felt less like a fish out of water. I made friends, danced at discos, sipped cappuccinos in the city square, visited the Cologne Cathedral, and even picked up enough German to communicate with locals. I went to my first sauna and laid in piles of snow in between the schvitzing. I learned to make pflaume kuchen (plum cake), schnitzel, and apple crepes from the grandmothers.

On free weekends, I jumped on the train and traveled to places like Amsterdam, Paris, and Prague. I explored the Rembrandt and Van Gogh museums, spent my 22nd birthday atop the Eiffel Tower, and even argued with a Parisian about Austin being the capital of Texas. He was adamant that it was Dallas.

I joined the family on holiday trips, spending almost three weeks in Tenerife, Spain, and even learned to ski in the Austrian Alps, where the children skied circles around me. But I didn't care. I was living my best life.

I have no regrets about taking the plunge and stepping out of my comfort zone. It was the perfect decision for me at that time in my life. Now, I encourage my own son and other young adults to do something equally courageous. We only have one life to live, so why not live it to the fullest?

Read the original article on Business Insider

❌