Photo by: Wendy Gossett

Go Ahead, Embarrass Your Kids and You Just Might Go Viral While Doing It!

by Wendy Gossett
Photo by: Wendy Gossett

It’s gone viral! People around the world have seen my simple video that portrays an embarrassing mom—me—dancing on the highway, in a blizzard! Because of a 20-car pile-up on Colorado’s I-25 outside of Denver, my two teenagers and I were stuck on the highway for almost five hours. My kids were livid, hungry, and desperately in need of a comfort station.

This is “the worst day ever,” my son kept lamenting over and over. According to a professor of psychology at Stanford University, “Negative emotions involve more thinking and processing then positive ones, so they stick with us longer.” I knew I had to paint this memory positively, so when “Everybody (Backstreet’s Back)” by the Backstreet Boys came on the radio, I got out of the car and boogied. My son plugged his ears in complete agitation, but I knew that my silly antics had the potential to create a positive memory they would never forget. I laughed later, as I read one of the thousands of comments that read, “I have no idea why THIS went viral.”
Thumbs down. I sort of agreed with this gentleman post-er, until I realized that this crabby fellow must not be a parent.

SEE VIDEO HERE Maybe this simple video of me embarrassing my son, went viral because as parents, we have all been there. Feeling the sting when our daughter asks us to drop her off a block away from school, or our son asks us to refrain from any mommy PDAs. Or, for me, when their eyes roll every time I try to “floss” properly. (My body, not my teeth!) We go from being the hero who Band-Aids booboos, assembles toys, and triumphantly carries birthday cupcakes into the classroom, to the embarrassing curmudgeon who “just doesn’t understand!”

As our sweet little chubby faced cherubs begin to grow facial hair or learn to “contour” their cheeks, it becomes easier to disconnect from them, let them have their space, and save ourselves from the heavy sighs and the eye rolls. There have been so many times I have just wanted to throw up my hands and take a vacation from trying so hard to connect, when it seems like they are trying so hard to disconnect.

But I don’t. I don’t give up trying to connect, because my passion in life has become helping parents connect with the kids they don’t understand by using child temperament psychology, as well as my observation of thousands of child personality patterns. “Connection is the number one way to prevent at-risk behaviors in our kids.” I have heard some painful stories from both adults and kids. “My parents wanted me to be a doctor, and I have been a disappointment to them my entire life,” or “My dad coaches football and can’t figure out why I don’t want to play. I am just too sensitive, he says.”

Parenting your opposite can be tough! You can probably see from the video that I have a free-spirited personality and my son is a bit more restrained. In a zombie apocalypse, my daughter would be slaying the zombies and I would be their food. Negative Bias is the way all humans are programmed; to see what’s wrong before we see what’s right. And at times, when I was frustrated, I would frame the differences I saw in her, as weaknesses. There were days when I couldn’t identify one strength in her because I was blinded by my own perspective. “Why can’t parenting my kids be easier?” Or in other words, “Why aren’t these kids just like me, so I would know how to parent them?”

Now that I have tasted the Holy Grail of our current generation—viral, worldwide fame—the greatest part was not having one of my daughter’s friends call me and gush “I love you!” because I was all over Google’s home page, or being interviewed by Debra Norville for Inside Edition, or even having two of those adorable Backstreet Boys tweet about me. The greatest part was, and still is, knowing that when my son goes off to college in—gulp—19 months, he will never forget the extreme measures his mom took to cheer him up and turn the “worst day ever” into the “best memory ever!”

So, my mantra, as the “dancing mom in traffic” has now become, “Go ahead: embarrass your kids, because deep down they will know you are just trying to love them.” No matter how often they roll their eyes, sigh heavily, or laugh AT you, rather than WITH you, keep trying, because even though they don’t show it, it means everything to them!

The first step to understanding your kids is to take my FREE parent and child temperament test at PeopleWorksCo.com, then subscribe to my YouTube channel to learn about more about your results and when you can get my upcoming book entitled ironically, “Guiding Their Drive. Parenting to your Kid’s Personality.” Wendy Gossett, MA

Like This Article

Like Mamapedia

Learn From Moms Like You

Get answers, tips, deals, and amazing advice from other Moms.

For Updates and Special Promotions
Follow Us
Want to become a contributor?
Want to become a contributor?

If you'd like to contribute to the Wisdom of Moms on Mamapedia, please sign up here to learn more: Sign Up

Recent Voices Posts

See all