Mimi wrote:
But I don’t know what kind of things parents are supppsed to care about now that weren’t like that 15 years ago, and I’d be really interested in what you have seen the biggest changes in, Flis. I don’t like the way children have to have every aspect of their personalities weighed and measured from 2 months old. My friends son hasn’t got many words yet and so was referred to speech therapy. Fine, if they perceive a problem and can help, then ok. Except they said no, they just do an assessment now at 2-3 years but they won’t actually provide any therapy until five. So, they give no help, just a label.
I think the whole culture surrounding parenting and babies has changed. Perhaps that is limited solely to my experience of it - My first baby was born in 1999, the internet wasn't really a thing you relied on every day for information in the way you do now. It was basically glorified Ceefax with Yahoo chat or MSN thrown in. You got your information from the health visitor, your mum, your friends who had babies, books and magazines. When I had the second one, I'd been through it once so didn't really feel the same need to find information.
Now, everyone can comment on everything, instantly. There is a huge amount of guilt available at your finger-tips and you don't even need to go looking for it - someone will barge into your thread or group chat or wall or whatever and tell you you're doing it wrong. That's the level of stuff I'm talking about - the things you do that never occurred to you to care about and you're not that bothered about but someone said you had to be. Changing your car to a huge SUV because you have one tiny baby to drive around, the £1000 pushchairs, attachment parenting, the 1st birthday cake smash, the casts of their hands and feet, newborn photo-shoots, the 100% organic snacks, toddler harness things so it can't ever fall over, rear-facing car seats until they're 4 because if you don't it's like wanting your kid to die, breastfeeding, a special seat to hold them in a certain way that they out-grow after 4 months, baby led weaning, 2 or 3 different accessories just to wash them, naming ceremonies, baby showers...
All of the above is largely fine and harmless, but should be down to personal preference - the anxiety of some women is unreal and largely unfounded, just because "they need to have the best for the baby". You do your best to raise your baby - that doesn't mean doing everything Instagram mums say you need to do, and if you can't or don't, you shouldn't feel bad about it.
Mimi - is the speech therapy/label thing perhaps something they do early so they have a record of numbers that might been special education or additional support once they start school? I imagine the first day of school isn't the best time to find out you have kids in the group who need that, especially when funding for such things is as fickle as it is. They probably find that putting the effort in now with speech therapy is an unnecessary expense as most cases resolve themselves when the kids are in a school environment. They thought my youngest may have been autistic, and also need speech therapy so they were geared up for further support and assessments when he started school - then it became apparent he's just a contrary little sod. He got an A in his English GCSE at the end of last year so he's doing okay now