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Authors: Caroline Manzo

Let Me Tell You Something (10 page)

BOOK: Let Me Tell You Something
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When they proved themselves, the boys were graduated to loading trucks, working as valets, and finally managing the valet, handling hirings and firings. Once, when Christopher was managing the valet, one of the drivers hit a car in the parking lot. For insurance reasons, Christopher had to be deposed, at eighteen.

When the insurance adjuster asked Chris to give his deposition, Chris asked if Albert would come into the questioning room with him. “Why, do I manage the valet?” Albert asked. You should have seen poor Chris's eyes widen. But Al felt that Christopher needed to understand how serious a responsibility it was to be giving a deposition. Chris summoned the courage and did it by himself. He told the truth, he knew the facts and he stepped up and handled it like a man.

I was incredibly proud of Christopher, because he literally worked his way to the very top. By the end of his time at The Brownstone, Chris had a desk beside his father. He wore a suit and oversaw the entire operation, just like his dad.

Lauren worked around The Brownstone too. She didn't do the hard manual labor that the boys did. But she checked coats, she took reservations, and then she started helping with the wedding parties. I remember once she came home and told me she'd had to put her head under a bride's dress to fix her stockings. “
That's your job, Lauren
,” I said to her. She just had to suck it up. But she did love the job, every minute of it. Well, maybe not that minute . . .

Lauren was also always expected to help me around the house. She did laundry, she cleaned the refrigerator. She made the boys' beds. The boys never made their beds, and she would complain about it, but I always told her that a girl needs to learn to be a good wife and mother. Call me old-fashioned, I don't mind. But I was raised to believe it's more important for the girl to learn to keep a house than her brothers. I was very tough on Lauren in the house, and Al was harder on the boys at work.

The kids were paid for the work they did at The Brownstone, but we never paid them an allowance for the work they did around the home. It's not something I believe in—paying your children just because? For things they should be doing as members of the family anyway? It just didn't make sense to me, and I didn't want to send the message that they could expect money once a week just because they did something that they should be doing anyway. Sometimes the kids had nothing in their pockets, sometimes they had a hundred dollars. But they never got paid for nothing. It's my firm belief that when kids have expendable cash that's when problems start—who knows what they'll do with that extra money, especially when they reach a certain age and pot, alcohol, and other drugs enter the picture.

If the kids asked for money, we'd ask what for? If they wanted clothes, I'd go with them to buy the clothes. If they were going out, they had to tell us where they were going and they had to call us and let us know where they were. We never just gave them going-out money with no questions asked. But they were also never without. We got them the clothes they wanted, and they always had enough money to hang out with their friends.

All of my kids have inherited our work ethic, and not one of them is a spoiled brat. When Christopher started the eighth grade, he saw a Rolex watch on a billboard, and he had to have it. He told his father that was the one thing he wanted. It cost four thousand dollars at the time. It was very expensive, and my husband told Christopher that it was fine if he wanted it, but he had to work for it. We wouldn't buy it for him.

Christopher was thirteen or fourteen, and he became obsessed with working for that watch. He never stopped, he was relentless. And by the time he graduated eighth grade, that summer, he had saved enough to buy it. It was just incredible to see as a parent. I went with him to the jewelers as he made the final payment, and took that watch and put it on his wrist. I'll never forget the expression on his face. It was the first time I looked at him and saw the man that he would become. I was so proud I cried.

I was reminded of Christopher's watch recently when the boys moved to Hoboken. When Christopher was faced with having to pay $300 a month for a garage, he decided to sell his car and just take public transportation. When he comes to visit me, he either rides with somebody or he takes the train to Ridgewood, and somebody picks him up. He's become a smart businessman.

If kids want things that are out of reach, don't kill that dream. If you can't afford to get it for them, show them that if they work, they can get it. All dreams are attainable if you want to work for it.

Because they always were putting in the work at The Brownstone and at home, it was easy to spoil them. They were good kids. And because of our parenting choices to push them to work hard and to not give them an allowance, I believe they understood the value of hard work and money better than a lot of their friends.

One thing that makes me proud and lets me know we did the right thing is the fact that all three of my kids have a very strong work ethic. They have all grown into hardworking adults, and I still love to treat them to indulgences every now and then. But if you see one of them walk by some trash on the ground at The Brownstone and not pick it up, you let me know.

Talking about sex with your
kids may be uncomfortable,
but it's easier than an
unplanned pregnancy.

I've never understood why people think it's hard to talk about sex with their kids. We potty train our kids, don't we? The sex talk can be as funny, messy, and silly as toilet training. But it's just as essential.

The way we did it in our house was we first let the teachers at school take care of teaching the kids the nuts and bolts of sex. They get to hear all the funny stuff in a roomful of their friends, and it's much less mortifying than hearing it from me or their dad.

After that, Albert and I would follow up to let the kids know about the responsibility and the respect that go along with being sexually active. Al and I were always blunt and open with our kids. Once, I found a condom in Albie's room, which told me he was either having sex or thinking about having sex. So I confronted him about it. I explained to him that I knew he was of the age to start hanging out with girls, but I wanted him to always respect a girl and never force himself on a girl. I wanted him to always treat women the way he liked to be treated, with kindness and empathy. That was the mom's version of “the talk” with my son.

Then I called Al and told him I'd found the condom and that it was time for him to have his version of that talk with Albie. I don't know what Al said to him, it wasn't ever my business. The open dialogue that we kept at home revolved around our kids respecting themselves and the people they were getting intimate with. It was never as open in my parents' home, but that was a different time, and it was important for me to be more forthcoming with my own kids.

As a mother, my message to Lauren was even more important. I was very matter-of-fact with her, telling her that she wasn't a pincushion. I told her she never wanted to be the girl that guys don't respect, the girl that guys talk about but never give the time of day. Anyone with a daughter needs to teach her that self-respect is the most important thing to have before you start to even think about sex. And teaching self-respect is something that happens in more than just one talk. You have to be vigilant with daughters. We all know how persuasive boys can be. It's incredibly important to let a daughter know that her self-worth does not revolve around her popularity with boys.

It's ridiculous to pretend that your kids aren't going to experiment with sex. Sure, some kids may not, but most of them will, and it's up to you to make sure they know about contraception and also about HIV and other diseases. Seriously, if you do a good enough job of
that
talk, it'll scare them off sex for at least a couple years.

I was always the mother that all the kids came to with their sexual problems. Lauren would bring them to me and tell me their problems—this girl needed a morning-after pill, this girl was raped, this girl might be pregnant. I'd sit and talk to these girls and boys about their problems and then I'd take them to their parents.

What I found most frequently was that these kids were just so terrified to talk about these issues with their own parents. And it just broke my heart to see them so alone, and so scared. Just because of sex. When I took them to their parents, it was never as bad as they anticipated. Parents were all teenagers once, and they know what goes on.

At a certain age, there was a shift in how we communicated with the kids. I started pulling back with the boys. They'd go on spring break, and all I asked of them was a phone call each day to let me know they were alive. I never asked any questions about what they were up to. It's not a mother's place to be so invasive. They'd call to check in, and I'd just say I'm glad you're having a good time. Later on, Albert would come home and say he'd talked to Albie and gotten the real story about his wild night, and we'd laugh. And that's fine, my husband knew the daddy version and I got the mommy version.

When my sons turned eighteen, my husband would get them a hotel room if they needed it. Albert would tell me if one of our sons wasn't coming home on a particular night, and as long as I knew he was safe, I was OK with it. I wouldn't call him or bother him or ask him about it afterward. I recognized that my son was becoming a man, and that the respect between us was a two-way street. I learned to respect their privacy.

Even with Lauren, she's twenty-three and she's been with Vito for three years, but when he comes over he can't sleep in her room. She has to respect this house. She's in a long-lasting relationship with a guy she's going to marry, but I have my boundaries.

I admit that I'm stricter on Lauren than I am on the boys. Albie is now living with a girl, and when they come over and stay, I let her sleep in his room. But they're living together. That's different. If Lauren was living with Vito they could sleep together when they visited too, but they aren't. It doesn't work like that.

These days, instead of talking about sex, the boys ask my opinion of the girls they date. Lauren is loyal to Vito, and I don't pry into their bedroom. My kids have all made it through to adulthood with no unplanned pregnancies or other sexual problems. This makes me glad we were always open to talking to our kids about sex. Any parent who tries to raise her kids in denial of sex is just asking for them to get screwed!

Principal, I
want
you to punish my kids.

From the minute my kids went off to school, I knew the game had changed. They were no longer completely under my care and guidance. They would be influenced now not only by what I taught them at home, but also by what they learned from their teachers. The time had come for me to share part of my parenting duties with my kids' new influences, so I enlisted the help of teachers, principals, guidance counselors. That's what they're there for! As a parent, I let the teachers teach, that's their number one role. But I did value the guidance they gave me, and I always looked to them to help me become a better parent myself.

Teachers loved the way Al and I parented our kids. They thought it was refreshing and uncommon. We weren't the parents that said “oh, not my child!” We were the ones that said “if they did it, punish them.” They appreciated that we respected their position as educators.

Ask Caroline

Caroline, I'm the mother of a nine-year-old boy, and I was wondering what you think is the appropriate age to discuss the topic of sex.

That's a tough one. It depends on the child. Some kids mature faster than others, both physically and emotionally. Watch your son as he develops and make your decision about when to talk sex based on his maturity level, not his age.

If he starts asking questions, always answer them honestly. When my kids were in fifth grade, they had a program designed for mother/daughter and father/son. The school nurse explained human anatomy and puberty, and even though it was awkward for the kids, at least they were there with a parent. If your school has that program, use it. If it doesn't, suggest it.

By the time your son goes to middle school he should have a basic understanding of things. Kids today are more advanced than we believe, and it's our job as parents to guide them down a responsible path.

I was lucky to have Al for a partner, as there are some things it's easier for a son to talk about with his dad. Al and I were very vocal with our kids when it came to using protection and acting responsibly. The bottom line is this: I'd rather have an uncomfortable conversation with my child about sex than have an issue with my child because I didn't.

All three of our kids were very different in school. Chris was a cutup and a smart-ass (in a good way). Lauren was quiet, but deadly. She knew which teachers to schmooze, so she never got into trouble. Albie was serious, he always wanted to please the teachers, but he was also mischievous. And the teachers were invaluable to us with all three. I e-mailed their teachers all the time, so I always knew when the kids had homework, even when they told me they didn't!

BEHIND THE SCENES

My kids love to mess with the camera guys. We've been around our crew so much, they're like family to us, which means they're all prime targets for practical jokes. The worst is Chris, he's always up to something. Once, during our time in Punta Cana, the cameraman was walking backward, filming Chris.. What he couldn't see was that he was heading toward a pool. Chris didn't say a thing, he just kept walking and doing his scene. At the very last second, a producer grabbed the cameraman and saved him from plunging into the pool with a $150,000 camera on his shoulder.

When Christopher was in middle school he was befriended by a kid with a bad reputation. The boy came by the house once or twice, and I told Christopher that I wasn't a fan and that he should reconsider the friendship. During this time, I contacted the school's guidance counselor. He had a talk with Christopher to reinforce my point of view while giving his. He kept an eye on Chris during lunch and recess. Chris fought me on my desire for him to find a new friend for a week or two but then he started to understand where I was coming from and eventually ended the friendship.

BOOK: Let Me Tell You Something
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