
Mom explains why she is trying to say ‘yes' more often
I can't begin to explain how frustrating that was, especially when there was no reason why it was a no. Just… no. End of discussion.
Now that I'm a mom myself, I've caught those exact words slipping out of my own mouth.
4 The mom says her mother's favorite phrase was 'no means no.'
nicoletaionescu – stock.adobe.com
But recently, I saw a TikTok that made me stop and think.
'The number one thing that I have struggled with in parenting is my innate sense to want to tell my children no,' mom Brenden begins in her video.
'Why am I just saying no?'
It's something she noticed through her daughter's behavior. How she started hiding things she wanted behind her back, worried her mom would say no.
'While that's something so small, it can grow into a lot more serious things as your children get older. I had to step back and ask myself: why am I just saying no? Why is that my immediate response to everything my child asks me?' she explains.
She realized that a lot of her no's were about control.
4 She questioned 'why am I just saying no?'
@brenden_cook/TikTok
And sure, there are absolutely times when a no is necessary. Brenden makes it clear that boundaries around safety and wellbeing aren't up for negotiation.
But some of those other no's? The reflexive ones? They're worth rethinking.
'A lot of times you can just say yes,' she reveals.
She gave the example of her daughter the other day, who asked if she could jump in a puddle.
'My immediate response was no. In my brain I'm like I don't want to have to change your shoes, I don't want your shoes to be wet, I don't want you to be uncomfortable, I don't want your clothes to get dirty,' Brenden said.
'As if she gives a s**t about any of that.'
Brenden is working hard to not say no to things that aren't a big deal.
4 The mother emphasized boundaries are still important.
@brenden_cook/TikTok
Do you tell your kids 'no' too much?
Yes, and I'm working on it
Sometimes, but it depends
No! Boundaries are important!
'Is it dangerous, or just inconvenient?'
So Brenden took a moment and reconsidered.
'I had to stop and give myself a reality check and be like 'girl. Who cares? Say yes!'' she revealed.
'She jumped in the puddle and she got her shoes and her clothes wet. Guess what happened? Nothing. Other than her having a great f**king time.'
Her comment section lit up with parents who felt the same.
'I saw a quote that said 'is it dangerous, or just inconvenient?' That has helped me to think before I say no! I am still working on it & your video was a great reminder!' one parent wrote.
Another admitted 'I struggle with finding a happy medium. I was saying yes to everything because I didn't want to be too strict but then I realized my kid needs to be told no sometimes.'
'I have to ask myself, 'Is it really that big of a deal?' Most of the time it's not. I struggle with this too!' a third added.
4 Her video's comment section lit up with parents who felt the same.
@brenden_cook/TikTok
Brenden says it's something she has to work on constantly, because being easygoing doesn't come naturally to her.
'I have to remind myself to say yes to the things that don't matter,' she said.
'I want to be the mom that my children know that I'm probably going to say yes, so that when I say no that know that I mean it.'
Turns out, a little puddle-jumping joy is worth the wet shoes.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
This Mom Is Going Viral For Sharing The Brutal Truth About Exactly What It's Like Being A Working Mom In America
Bringing home a new baby is tough enough, but the current United States parental leave policy can make things even more difficult. The US only guarantees 12 weeks of unpaid parental leave via Family and Medical Leave (FMLA) — with restrictions about the company's size and the employee's tenure — leaving new parents to determine if they can afford extra time with their newborn or to recover after birth. According to a 2019 Pew Research Center report, "the US is the only country among 41 nations that does not mandate any paid leave for new parents." They also noted that "the share of moms who are working either full or part time in the United States has increased over the past half-century from 51% to 72%, and almost half of two-parent families now include two full-time working parents." The National Institute for Health reports that on average, new moms go back to work after 10 weeks, and that longer leave is "seen primarily among economically advantaged groups, such as college educated, married parents who can afford to take unpaid leave." So it's no surprise that brookiethecookie, aka @adayinaeats on TikTok, recently went viral with a video in which she shared just how difficult the life of a working mother in the US can be. In the video, she can be seen crying at her desk, with a text overlay that says, "me at work because I'm watching my baby sit up for the first time through the monitor." @adayinaeats / Via "Being a working mom is so much harder than I could've imagined. Missing the milestones just breaks me," she said in the caption. Many commenters were immediately supportive and understanding. "One year of paid federal maternity leave NEEDS to be the standard. I'm glad women are getting louder about this, it's a huge issue," said one. "The US needs to figure something out bc being a parent in this country is so unfair." "The US is cruel to families. Every other developed nation has figured out the balance." "USA is a third world country in a Gucci belt." "It's crazy how a country can be so obsessed with controlling pregnancy but won't support moms after birth..." The conversation made its way over to Twitter (now X), where people discussed parental leave in other nations. "I'm on an 18-month paid leave through the government," said one person, alongside Canadian flag emojis. "In Scandinavian countries a year of parental is granted to both parents." Some commenters argued that this was a signal that moms shouldn't be working, period, and should be stay-at-home mothers if they have children. "Proof that marrying a good provider man is a flex. Being a girl boss isn't." "the government isn't responsible to give you time with your child. this is why choosing a good husband who allows you to be a stay at home mother is so important," another person said. "Ladies: Marry a provider husband so you can raise your kids." But others fought back, saying raising a family on one income wasn't affordable these days in America, and that it's important for women to pursue their careers as well. "sure, go ahead, please you guys show us how you provide for a full family with one salary in this economy," one person said. "we need women in universities in the workforce in positions of authority n power. that being said paid maternity leave until your baby is kindergarten age shld be a given." Another commenter pointed out that this isn't just a problem for moms; it's tough on all parents. "men want to see their babies firsts too and get upset about this EXACT SAME THING," they said. And finally, this person summed up the whole discussion pretty succinctly: "America core." You can see brookiethecookie's full video below. @adayinaeats / Via Now I'd love to know: if you're a working parent, what are your thoughts on the S's parental leave policies? What do you think would be an ideal amount of time to take off for new parents? And if you're not in the US, what is the parental leave like where you live? Let us know in the comments. And if you'd prefer to remain anonymous, you can fill out the form below.


Buzz Feed
3 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
Woman Shows Difficulty Of Being Working Mom In America
Bringing home a new baby is tough enough, but the current United States parental leave policy can make things even more difficult. The US only guarantees 12 weeks of unpaid parental leave via Family and Medical Leave (FMLA) — with restrictions about the company's size and the employee's tenure — leaving new parents to determine if they can afford extra time with their newborn or to recover after birth. So it's no surprise that brookiethecookie, aka @adayinaeats on TikTok, recently went viral with a video in which she shared just how difficult the life of a working mother in the US can be. In the video, she can be seen crying at her desk, with a text overlay that says, "me at work because I'm watching my baby sit up for the first time through the monitor." "Being a working mom is so much harder than I could've imagined. Missing the milestones just breaks me," she said in the caption. Many commenters were immediately supportive and understanding. "One year of paid federal maternity leave NEEDS to be the standard. I'm glad women are getting louder about this, it's a huge issue," said one. "The US needs to figure something out bc being a parent in this country is so unfair." "The US is cruel to families. Every other developed nation has figured out the balance." "USA is a third world country in a Gucci belt." "It's crazy how a country can be so obsessed with controlling pregnancy but won't support moms after birth..." The conversation made its way over to Twitter (now X), where people discussed parental leave in other nations. "I'm on an 18-month paid leave through the government," said one person, alongside Canadian flag emojis. "In Scandinavian countries a year of parental is granted to both parents." Some commenters argued that this was a signal that moms shouldn't be working, period, and should be stay-at-home mothers if they have children. "Proof that marrying a good provider man is a flex. Being a girl boss isn't." "the government isn't responsible to give you time with your child. this is why choosing a good husband who allows you to be a stay at home mother is so important," another person said. "Ladies: Marry a provider husband so you can raise your kids." But others fought back, saying raising a family on one income wasn't affordable these days in America, and that it's important for women to pursue their careers as well. "sure, go ahead, please you guys show us how you provide for a full family with one salary in this economy," one person said. "we need women in universities in the workforce in positions of authority n power. that being said paid maternity leave until your baby is kindergarten age shld be a given." Another commenter pointed out that this isn't just a problem for moms; it's tough on all parents. "men want to see their babies firsts too and get upset about this EXACT SAME THING," they said. And finally, this person summed up the whole discussion pretty succinctly: "America core." Now I'd love to know: if you're a working parent, what are your thoughts on the S's parental leave policies? What do you think would be an ideal amount of time to take off for new parents? And if you're not in the US, what is the parental leave like where you live? Let us know in the comments. And if you'd prefer to remain anonymous, you can fill out the form below.


Boston Globe
14 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Why have men stopped reading fiction?
Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up There are, broadly speaking, three prevailing theories about this phenomenon. None of them is entirely wrong, but none, I think, is wholly sufficient. Advertisement The first is the digital explanation: Men no longer read because they're glued to screens. The internet, video games, podcasts, TikTok — all of it constitutes a parallel media universe more alluring, and less demanding, than the quiet work of reading. But this account falls short, if only because the male retreat from literature began long before smartphones took over our lives. As some observers have Advertisement The After all, books that men could be reading, the novels of the 19th, 20th, and early 21st centuries, most of them written by men, are still in print. No one is keeping Hemingway or Updike or Bellow a secret. And yet the appetite seems to have vanished. The problem isn't that men can't find books that speak to them — it's that they're no longer interested in looking. Advertisement This brings us to the third theory: that something in male culture has shifted. That inner life — the emotional, reflective, and interpretive habits that literature nourishes — has come to be seen as antithetical to masculinity. That boys are raised to think of novels as feminine, soft, somehow suspect. There's truth here, too, and it's probably the most troubling of the explanations. But even this feels like only part of the picture. I think something far simpler is going on: I don't believe men have been shown what literature is for, and the blame for that is widely shared. High school syllabi too often chop novels into excerpts, avoid assigning whole books, and fail to give students the time to read independently and for pleasure. Books are not being presented to boys as sources of escape or adventure — on par with the coolest video game or most entertaining movie. The expanding field of online male influencers is not exactly portraying literature as something that might deepen, rather than diminish, one's masculinity. Yet literature offers something men desperately need: a way to process the complexities of their own experience. To understand what it means to be a son, a brother, a father, a lover, a friend. To hold in mind contradictory impulses and shifting roles. To be tender without being weak, open without being unmoored, confident without being cruel. These are not 'female' qualities. They are human ones. But it's through literature that many of us learn how to inhabit them. Advertisement This isn't about becoming a literary dandy who can summarize Proust at parties. Reading novels isn't for show. It makes you more empathetic, more emotionally agile, more capable of navigating the world's demands with subtlety and grace. But where to start? I've got some recommendations. First, there are excellent novels about men living through periods of instability and cultural decline. John Galsworthy's 'Forsyte Saga' is a sweeping meditation on marriage, legacy, and the pursuit of property ownership. John Updike's 'Rabbit Angstrom' quartet follows one man's uneasy passage through postwar America with all the lust, failure, and spiritual confusion of fatherhood. John Dos Passos's 'U.S.A.' is a trilogy that paints a fragmented, panoramic portrait of American ambition and disenchantment between the world wars, and Cormac McCarthy's 'The Border Trilogy' chronicles the loneliness and beauty of two young cowboys moving through an American frontier in decline. Then there's John Cheever's 'Wapshot Chronicles,' which captures the rebellion of two young men from south of Boston who grow up to discover the world has no place for them. And Tom Wolfe's 'A Man in Full' satirizes the sometimes fragile, sometimes triumphant American male ego in its quest for power and respect in an unstable society. There are some novels that may not appear on any top-100 list but that have stayed with me: Henry Miller's 'Black Spring,' an R-rated book that's really about the ecstasy of being alive; John Crowley's 'Little, Big,' a luminous novel about family, myth, and time; Edith Wharton's 'The Age of Innocence' and Iris Murdoch's 'The Black Prince,' which remind us that the male psyche is often best illuminated by female genius. Advertisement To close out with some humor: Jerome K. Jerome's 'Three Men in a Boat,' Paul Beatty's 'The Sellout,' and Kingsley Amis's 'Lucky Jim' — three novels that have helped me take life a bit less seriously. I view literature not as an escape or eccentricity but as a way of understanding life. And I've noticed, more and more, that other men see it as strange, an unusual affectation rather than a central part of adulthood. That strikes me as a loss. Not just for them but for all of us.