Ok, I know I said I was out of here, but I can’t help myself.
Which is completely unrelated to boys playing with dolls. I spent the first 20 years of my marriage cooking on weekends, always did my share of changing diapers, etc. Ended up having to take care of the kids and the house all by myself for an extended period of time. the priest is obviously correct. Guess what, men figure it out. And there is nothing wrong with teaching you son how to cook. My boys certainly take a lot of interest in my cooking. Boys in college have to learn how to do laundry. And none of us ever had to play with dolls or do any type of female role-playing.
I hope no one is suggesting that parents should push their children into play or leisure activities that the child never showed any interest in pursuing. If you hunt or fish, take your child hunting and fishing. If they don’t like it, though, you should eventually give it up and accept that your children won’t have all the same interests that you do.
If your son doesn’t show any interest in baby dolls, there is no reason to try to interest him in it, since that isn’t something a typical boy will feel you “should” have given him when he looks back on his childhood. If he doesn’t like throwing balls, let him be. If your child does not want to play with trucks, he’ll be OK.
Is there anything you should push your child into doing? Yes.
You should push your children into play that involves getting up and getting moving. If they don’t like to move, chase them around yourself. If you love baseball and your son loves soccer or swimming, though, let the kid play soccer or swim instead of learning to throw a ball. (Yes, even if he has a killer fastball.)
You should push your children into expecting themselves to contribute to the work that needs to be done to run a household. You do not have to force them to be the one who usually vacuums if they hate vacuuming when they don’t mind emptying the dishwasher or walking the dog or enjoy other tasks that have to be done, but they ought to know how to do whatever needs doing and they should eventually expect to
make themselves do it.
You should push your child into spending time reading. If it is decent, it doesn’t matter what your children like to read, but children who read will grow up into young people with more options in life.
You should push your child into using good manners. This includes being able to talk to people they do not know particularly well enough to be hospitable, it includes socializing in the absence of any electronic crutches without showing discomfort, it includes remaining in one’s chair for the duration of an entire meal, and it includes knowing what polite people do and do not say in social situations.
You should push your child into wearing clothing appropriate for his or her gender and the situation he or she is in. Yes, provide formal clothes that are comfortable, but a child should not expect to be able to wear exercise clothing everywhere he goes. (I’m not one who thinks a child should be wearing a Halloween costume to the grocery store, but I wouldn’t make that a universal rule of parenting. That one could be “just me,” LOL; I don’t think parents who allow that are “bad parents.”)
I’m sure there are more…any other suggestions?