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Cool Moms

Monday, June 22, 2009

Jancee Dunn, author of Why Is My Mother Getting a Tattoo?: And Other Questions I Wish I Never Had to Ask, on why it's so hard to feel like a grown-up around your parents, especially when they are trying so hard to act younger.

How do you behave around your mom? Will you always be a kid in her eyes? Comment below!


Comments

  • [1] Robert from NYC June 22, 2009 - 10:46AM

    No, I'm the world's oldest kid. My mom still introduces me as her "baby"... I'm 63 years old!!!!


  • [2] MichaelB from Morningside Heights June 22, 2009 - 10:49AM

    I squirm when I hear parents use the word "cool" when speaking to their kids...Uggh!


  • [3] Suki from Williamsburg June 22, 2009 - 10:50AM

    I am my mother's mother. When she got divorced 10 years ago, I had to sit her down and talk to her about safe sex and drunk driving.


  • [4] DarkSymbolist from NYC June 22, 2009 - 10:51AM

    Ummm...Lots of people of all ages play Guitar Hero....the idea that video games are just for kids is quite frankly, old fashioned and passe...it's just another form of entertainment

    Maybe the issue isn't that your guest's parents are stuck in "adolescence" but rather that your guest is just old fashioned and out of touch?


  • [5] lauren from Asbury Park June 22, 2009 - 10:52AM

    i grew up with my dad... when i was 13, (this was 15 years ago) my dad would give me a hard time for snowboarding instead of skiing, i told my dad "he couldnt make fun of it til he tried it".

    That was a mistake - he did, and was much better than me - as he was (and still is) a surfer, which gave him an advantage.


  • [6] Mac Daddy from New York City June 22, 2009 - 10:52AM

    what an awful guest. She called the tattoo artist before her Mom went!?! Wow- that is just absurd. And incredibly narcissistic. Maybe you should allow your parents to be people instead of just who you think they are supposed to be.


  • [7] scnex from harlem June 22, 2009 - 10:58AM

    its not a middle-class white issue, rebellion is at the heart of the other, or the image of the other. it is clear that life issues affect all humanity equally. it is only this notion of white superiority which makes it a factor of ownership... get over the factor of control... that is the very issue of the white man's burden.


  • [8] Rodger Stevens from Nyack, NY June 22, 2009 - 10:59AM

    This author's premise is so thin and pointless and arbitrary. Please move on or at least feign technical difficulties and play music.

    Have a lovely day,

    Rodger


  • [9] Nadia from Brooklyn June 22, 2009 - 10:59AM

    I am finding this conversation to be a little insulting and self-righteous. My son has 1 Ramones onesie and a Ramones lullabye CD. I also have many friends who have tattooed there moms. I think it's great for parents not to fall into the A-Typical mold of a parent role.


  • [10] Nora Rocket from Queens, NY June 22, 2009 - 11:10AM

    I think this guest is proving that she is, indeed, still a child to her mother: embarrassed of her, just like a 13-year-old, when the mother does something that she thinks is Not Right For An Adult, like *gasp* getting a tattoo (or in my case at 13, acts in a broad vaudeville-style stage review with baudy jokes). This subject turns on the false idea that there is only one kind of proper "adult," and that person doesn't do the things that "kids" do (similarly, there's just one kind of "kid" in this scenario). This limits both groups of people, requiring that adults care about matching clothes and that children prefer to eat favorite foods and stay up late. Listening to Jancee rattle down the reasons she was "cool" (Rolling Stone, hipster, etc.) and then prude up about her mom's behavior reveals more about Jancee's hangups about what is "proper" for people (women particularly?) to do than it does about any kind of universal "adulthood."


  • [11] patty from new jersey June 22, 2009 - 11:27AM

    I tuned in because I've loved Jancee's other books. The stuff she wrote about her family in her first book was so funny. I think people may have been taking the "cool parent" idea to seriously.


  • [12] eva June 22, 2009 - 01:05PM

    Maybe the larger question is why middle-aged (and older) women feel so OBLIGED to act young.

    Maybe it reflects our national cult of youth - or our society's contempt for older women.

    I'm sorry to say it, but recently I was at a party and the women had their faces so puffed up with Restylane that they looked like circus freaks.

    They would have been lovely as their real selves. If not that, then at least not like circus freaks. I couldn't recognize one of them, it was scary... and sad.

    As for the premise that the guest is old-fashioned and out of touch... well... she might take that as a compliment.

    My concern is that we are moving in the direction of thinking of "in touch" and "progressive" as being matters of style. Whereas real progressive issues - necessary reform in government, banking, legal system, health care and agriculture (and infrastructure!) doesn't make the "cool" cut.

    So if you have a tattoo, buy "hip" new clothes, and take your SUV to go snow-boarding, you're "in touch"? Whereas some middle-aged person who eats vegetarian, has a modest dress code, conserves fuel and other precious resources, and volunteers with an under-served population is, well, not even a subject worthy of discussion.

    There's gotta be something more to growing older than proving we're "in touch" through tattoos... (and no, I'm not saying that people who snowboard and have tattoos aren't already involved in making the world a better place - my question is just... why is the style aspect the subject of discussion?)


  • [13] phyllis from nyc June 22, 2009 - 05:30PM

    Really, this vacuous topic deserves the Brian Lehrer treatment?


  • [14] ann from NYC June 24, 2009 - 11:52AM

    Her whole trip smacks of ageism. I live in NYC, doesn't this self proclaimed "hipster" realize hipsters are lame posers? I guess she's upset because she has nothing to rebel against. A real rebel without a clue.


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