Unparenting
Book Review
Title: Unparenting: Sharing
Awkward Truths with Curious Kids
Author: Reema Ahmad
Publisher: Penguin Random House,
2022
Pages: 232
If you don’t want a child, use a condom. Imagine a
book on parenting telling something as blunt as that. Reema Ahmad’s books does
that and much more. This book is a no-holds-barred guide book to all those who
are going to be parents or are already parents of little babies. I recommend it
highly to such readers.
Somebody has to tell the harsh
truths. Reema Ahmad went through a painful marriage that was imposed on her
when she was too young and unprepared for it. Her marriage ended up in divorce
soon. Her parents hadn’t divorced merely because they belonged to another
generation. The pain of all such unhealthy conjugal relationships is borne ultimately
by the children. Why not avoid that? A good question. A necessary question.
There are over eight billion people
on our planet. How many of them were born because their parents really wanted
them? Maybe ten percent? Twenty? Not more than that, I’d dare say. Most of us
are “collateral damages,” as Reema Ahmad puts it. I was a collateral damage, I
know.
This book is born out of a lot of
painful personal experiences. But the book is written by one who studied the
subject deeply enough. Reema Ahmad is a neurolinguistic programming life coach
as well as a mental space psychologist. She has studied the subject well and
she has lived it too.
Every young couple in India should
read this book, let me assert again.
In India, I said, because the book
challenges a lot of Indian conventions about child-rearing. There are too many
taboos and restrictions which are counterproductive in the Indian way of
bringing up children. I agree with Ahmad totally. I went through an infernal
childhood myself. Then I became a teacher by profession and lived with children
for forty years. I know how the Indian systems – made up by parents, teachers, and
the society – stifle childhood.
Unparenting is a unique blend of
memoir, personal essays, and psychological guidance on raising children through
honest dialogue. Her little son Imaad plays the lead role in the narrative, so
to say. How does she bring him up as a single parent, trying to mould in him as
healthiest of a personality as possible? We learn that from the book – from lived
personal examples as well as accepted psychological frameworks.
The book covers a wide range of
topics related to the physical growth and psychological development of children
such as body changes, puberty, sex, intimacy, relationships, abuse, bullying,
and emotional health. Towards the last part of the book, topics such as loss
and grief are also discussed in detail.
One of the book’s defining features
is its emphasis on open, non-judgmental communication between parent and child.
The Indian families, irrespective of religion, don’t encourage children’s
inquisitiveness, particularly when it comes to sex and related subjects. How to
handle the situation in healthy ways? Read this book and find out.
The best thing about this book is
that it not prescriptive; it empowers you if you are a parent or a teacher. It
invites you – parent/teacher – to think, experiment, and evolve your own
approach. Parenting is a process of becoming, growing with your child. The book
guides you how to do that effectively.
If you are a young parent or going to be one, and if you are not too straitjacketed by the conventions which brought you up, go ahead and read this book. It will make a lot of meaningful difference to your life.
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| Reema Ahmad with her son Imaad |
PS. I received a copy of the book as a prize for a blogging activity organised by a blogger’s community led by Manali Manan Desai and Sukaina Majeed. #EveryConversationMatters.


Thanks for this enlightening introduction. Way back in late 1970s and Mid-Eighties, there was the Summerhill book.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read thst Summerhill book. In fact, heard about it first time now. But the approach is similar, I guess. Transcending the quotidian - a word I learnt from you years ago.
DeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteA good recommendation, it seems.... not something I can directly relate to, but have observed enough to appreciate there's a gap! YAM xx