I keep my healthy four-year-old in a buggy – because it’s easier for me! Defiant mother scoffs at warnings that stopping children from walking is harmful


  • LAUREN GEE still takes her four-year-old son home in a buggy
  • She says it saves time when he is being difficult on the school run
  • Sebastian sometimes runs off or refuses to walk when they are out

By
Lauren Gee

17:09 EST, 22 March 2014

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17:09 EST, 22 March 2014

My four-and-a-half-year-old son Sebastian quite often emerges from the school gate exhausted, irritable and impossible to reason with. Dragging his feet along the pavement, the ten-minute stroll home would take ten times longer if I let him go at his own pace. So I whisk him into his buggy and wheel him away.

There’s nothing wrong with his legs. Sebastian is more than capable of walking and sometimes complains about being strapped in. But both of us are the better for him not being on foot.

So most days I still use the buggy, and I will continue to do so for as long as I can get away with it.

Pushed to the limit: Lauren Gee, from Loughton, Essex, believes transporting her four-year-old son Sebastian in a buggy is the the best way to save time on the school run

I know I’m not the only one. Parenting forums such as Mumsnet are full of exhausted mothers extolling the virtues of buggies, sometimes for children as old as five.

Being a mother can be stressful and using a buggy is a sensible and simple way to save my sanity during the daily grind of parenting.

It is certainly not harmful, which is why a friend and I were incredulous at recent research that claimed parents who put young children in buggies for too long could impair not only their physical skills but  also their speech.

According to neuropsychologist Sally Goddard Blythe, director of the Institute for Neuro Physiological Psychology in Chester, an over-reliance on prams and strollers reduces the time children spend interacting with parents. The knock-on effects, she warns, can harm performance at school and last throughout their lives.

Nonsense! Yes, my son’s buggy  is forward-facing but at his age he  is more than capable of turning to talk to me. When he’s not in it I make sure he has plenty of activity, including weekly football and gymnastics sessions, to keep him healthy.

Danger buggy: Last week neuropsychologist Sally Goddard Blythe warned that an overreliance on strollers can harm a child’s performance at school and last throughout their lives

Besides, unless any of these ‘experts’ have experienced the sheer, tear-your-hair-out frustration of being confronted with a stubborn, whining little boy who parks himself in the middle of the pavement, refusing to budge because  his legs are too tired, I don’t believe they are in any position to pass judgment. What am I supposed to do? He offers me no option.

He isn’t badly behaved. But he is  a typical four-year-old.

If I let him walk, he wanders off into people’s front gardens or swings around lampposts, which is all very well  on days off but not on the three  mornings a week when I have to deliver his two-year-old sister Daphne to her child-minder before getting to my job as a project manager for a housing federation. Being late is not an option.

COMMENT BY DR ELLIE CANNON

I’ve read Lauren’s story and the opinion of neuropsychologist Sally Goddard Blythe. And I  agree with the expert – that expert being Lauren.

The theory that the use of buggies prevents interaction  with mothers is typical of the black-and-white dogma parents are faced with today.

A huge number of aspects of modern life reduce interaction with parents: things like phones, cars, televisions and working parents. How can any research isolate forward-facing buggies as the culprit? Of course closeness is essential, but surely so is seeing the world around you.

Parenting decisions are made in reality by considering a huge number of factors that are individual to the family and child. And that is exactly what Lauren has done.

In an ideal world Sebastian would be walking home; he’s old enough and the exercise would be good for him. But he isn’t overweight, and  from her descriptions he sounds like many boisterous, inquisitive boys his age.

My children certainly weren’t in  a buggy at that age, and I wouldn’t recommend my patients have their four-year-olds in buggies.

But Lauren has made a decision based on the convenience, safety and ease of her family.
She has weighed up the pros and cons and is doing what she believes is right for her child.

At 2st 8lb Sebastian is too heavy to carry. I know this because I’ve put my back out trying.

He gets bored on his scooter and jumps off his buggy board – a platform that attaches to the pram for him to stand on.

The half-mile distance between our home in Loughton, Essex, and his school doesn’t warrant driving.

So a buggy – single if we are on our own or our double  if we’re with Daphne – is the only option. Both are forward-facing  and built to hold older children of up to 3st 4lb each.

I wouldn’t contemplate taking Sebastian any distance without  one.

The last time I did so, a couple of months ago, he ran off down a busy side street in Central London.  I was terrified.

On another occasion, when I decided to risk using only the single buggy to transport Daphne, I had to drape him over the hood just to get him home.

If we’re going shopping I will strap him in for up to two hours. I provide books, his lunch box and, as a last resort, an iPad by way of diversion.

Strangers give me disparaging looks in the street and friends say that instead of using a buggy, I should discipline Sebastian better. But how many four-year-olds listen to their mum when they are tired?

My partner, Leighton, 37, a systems architect, would love to get rid of the buggy but it’s more because of the space it takes up in our home than because it’s bad for our son’s health.

My mum is also adamant it would  be better for her grandson’s health  to walk more. They are all entitled to their opinions but as a grown woman of 32 I don’t have to listen.

Increasingly, Sebastian does tell me he’s too big for a pushchair and begs me to let him out.

He feels self-conscious because his friends don’t use one and asks me to walk the last few yards before we get to school so they don’t see him in it.

After Sebastian turns five in August, he’ll hopefully be better at walking, by which time he will be too big for the buggy and, in any case, he will have to make room  in our buggy for my third child, who I’m expecting next month.

Until then I will carry on pushing him in his buggy, regardless of what anyone else has to say about the matter.

Frankly, it’s nobody’s business but my own.

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