IMG_0906I had no idea how much would be expected of my kids starting at birth. From the day my babies were born I’ve been required to fill out questionnaires at each well visit to make sure they’re developmentally on track. Not to mention the endless parenting websites that offer weekly birthdate-timed developmental newsletters.

I’m mostly thankful for said questionnaires and newsletters. The majority of the time it makes me feel at peace when I get to check the boxes to confirm my children are where they should be. I don’t disagree with the need for a general developmental timeline to easily catch severe developmental delays. It absolutely serves an important purpose and helps many families.

However, my concern is that having tools and checklists like these at our fingertips can make us hypersensitive and obsessive with making sure our kids are hitting every single milestone exactly on time. As a result, it’s easy to place unnecessary pressure on ourselves and our children. We want our kids to be “normal”, because being normal means they have great chances at being successful, according to our society’s standards anyway. We seem to think that the sooner our kids can start racking up knowledge and experiences the greater their chances are for a lifetime full of success.

This whole topic is fresh on my mind because of a personal experience. When my oldest turned two last October, I took him in for his two year old well visit and answered the appropriate questionnaire. One of the questions asked if he was stringing together words into short sentences. At that point he wasn’t. I talked about it with the doctor and learned that there was this free developmental assessment that could be done for him through the school system that a team would come out to our house to administer. Should he qualify, he would receive free speech therapy. I took the informational pamphlet and brought it home to discuss with my husband.

We went back and forth. My gut told me that he was totally fine and probably just a bit of a late talker, but since he was my first and I didn’t know for sure, the worrier in me wanted to address any potential problems. We decided to go through with the assessment. To make a long story short, the results showed that he was on the fence. If we wanted help they would be able to make a case for it and would be happy to provide speech therapy.

Since January we’ve had a speech therapist coming to visit my little guy on a weekly basis. She does activities with him and gives me strategies to implement.

His vocabulary is growing by leaps and bounds, but honestly I don’t think it really has all that much to do with the therapy. More than anything, I think he just needed more time. He has a shy personality and he’s more of a thinker and engineer type than the chatterbox. He’s more concerned with learning how something works than talking about what color it is.

I wanted to share that backstory with you because I feel like I jumped the gun and was the obsessively worried parent when I didn’t need to be. If I had to do it all over again, I would have listened to my gut and just let him develop at his own pace. It’s not that I think the therapy hindered him at all, but being around adults whose job is to point out what my kid isn’t doing when it’s not a matter of life or death created an environment that made us second guess his development instead of being encouraged by his progress.

While I agree that we should be doing all we can to set our kids up for success, at the end of the day, my heart tells me that we also just need to let our kids be kids. They have a lifetime ahead of them where they’ll be expected to perform and achieve. They’re bound to be over scheduled like the rest of us. When they enter school their lives will be laid out for the next 18 years and beyond.

I want to soak up these sweet pre-school years with my kids. I don’t want to spend time obsessing over whether they’re doing this or that. I want to take advantage of the teachable moments, and let the rest go. More than anything, I want to love on my kids like crazy, celebrate each victory big or small, and embrace how beautifully and uniquely they were created, which means they’ll each develop at their own pace.

How do you approach developmental milestones? 

P.S. For more reflections on parenthood and life, follow us on Facebook (Hun Let’s Run) and on Instagram: @ambermariekuiper and @jakekuiper! We’d also love for you to subscribe to our Hun, Let’s Run Podcast! For more info about joining our fitness community as a customer or coach, please email us at amber@mommysmetime.com!

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About Author

I'm a mom of four kids, raising them in Southwest Florida alongside my husband Jake! I love to share motherhood reflections, travel tips, and everything we're up to as a family!

5 Comments

  1. avatar

    Thanks for sharing this, Amber! We have been talking over this with our little guy, and my gut has said he’s fine too. I love the satisfaction of checking boxes too, so we’ve deliberately chosen to lean the opposite way and trust the developmental process and only bring attention to something at a dr. when God truly leads us to. Our kiddos were both born at home, have only ever seen a chiropractic doc and gotten regular chiro adjustments. Our chiro-doc checks into anything we are curious about developmentally and I’ve had peace so far with the hands off approach we’ve taken. No charts or comparing my kid with “normal” or the average of everyone else. It’s been a growing experience in surrender and trust for me for sure!! But I do have a recommended pediatricians number in my back pocket for any time God leads us or gives us a gut feeling it’s time for a visit. 😉

  2. avatar
    Jen says:

    Wow, short sentences at two?? I guess we were really behind then 🙂 My daughter only had about 10 words total a month before she turned two. She is now three and talks all.the.time. It is so funny now as we used to say how we wished she would talk more….now we wished our little chatterbug would be quite more sometimes 🙂
    My daughter has a cousin that is 4 months older than her and we had to deal with constant comments about why our daughter was not doing the stuff their son was. Sometimes it just takes kids longer than others to catch on and there is NOTHING wrong with it. Trust your mommy gut. One of my favorite responses to people who are judgy is “How much fun would the world be if we were all the same….”

  3. avatar
    Bridget Black says:

    you are such an inspiration!!! What a refreshing and hopeful angle and what a faith-filled loving Mama you are!!

  4. avatar
    Emily says:

    Thank you for honesty! We had the same thing with our son, who is now 4. He is shy, quiet, analyzer, thinker, etc as well. He wasn’t saying as many words/sentences as a cousin who is 6 months older, and it made me worry a little bit too. But my husband is the non-worrier and assured me that he was fine. And indeed, he is! We have a 1-year old daughter as well who has a different personality and is blabbering all the time. A great reminder to cherish the moments with our kids instead of worrying!

  5. avatar
    Sheena says:

    I absolutely love your perspective – Thank you for sharing.

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