This, but I would address the comment in the moment too. Something like, “Wow, that was very rude and unnecessary. I don’t appreciate that.” When my kids are being particularly rude or ungrateful, I give them the speech (same one my parents gave me) that much of their life is optional. I am required to give them basic food, minimal clothing, shelter, and school. Anything else, I am CHOOSING to provide for them because I love them very much, but still it’s optional. And if they want their life to keep going the way it is, they need to shape up. This usually does the trick for a good long while. When I need to give them quick reminders of this I use “hey, more gratitude, less attitude please.” and they know what I mean. I agree it’s “normal” but that doesn’t mean it should be ignored. |
Have you had a conversation about why she is angry? You should do this first before punishing |
Follow this advice if you do not want a relationship. |
What kind of parent addresses rude, immature behavior by behaving in a rude and immature way? “Snatching”? Wow, PP. Do better. |
| I would've squashed it right there. That's no way to talk to your mother. |
This is super lame and cringy. Don’t do this, OP. |
| I am surprised that some of you think a good way to address immature, rude behavior is to try to top it. You need to read some basic parenting books. |
| Explain to them, when you are rude and disrespectful, it’s difficult for me to do nice things for you (rides, buy favorite snacks, fund an outing, prepare/buy food for a friend get together). Sometimes you need to spell it out for kids. |
I have a great relationship with my kids, and teasing them out of bad moods while also making it clear rude or obnoxious while in one is unacceptable has worked well for us since the obnoxious moments have been few and far between. |
This is passive aggressive BS. Do better. |
This. I just explained to my kids I’m a human and I have feeling. They aren’t sociopaths so while they don’t immediately and joyfully hang out with me they try to be nice. We work to find common things we like. I’m NEVER asking my kids to run errands, but they may go for a hike/walk or go hit golf balls or watch a movie. |
+1 I have two teen DDs, ages 15 and 17. We didn’t tolerate this type of disrespect. I like how PP kept the focus on the word choice and avoided labeling the teen. I do think it matters — your teen herself isn’t rude. She just made a rude comment. “We don’t talk to each other like that in this family” was something I found myself saying at times. It was a helpful reminder to myself, too, that reminding your teen that rude comments aren’t acceptable doesn’t justify being mean, rude, or disrespectful yourself. Some of the suggested responses here strike me as just mean. I also wholeheartedly agree that there are consequences if this type of comment is repeated. |
Why? Let me meet the kids of the authors of those parenting books first, at least, before I conclude they have any clue what the hell they’re talking about. (Anyone remember that cheesy movie “She’s out of control” with Tony Danza? And how infuriated he was when he discovered Wallace Shawn’s character didn’t even have a daughter?) |
DP. It may be passive aggressive but I also guarantee it will get the point across better than any of the other suggestions in this thread. |
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Many people don't take the time to understand their kids' perspective, and it leads to unnecessary conflict and sometimes, years of lasting resentment. I will never forget my mother's hyper-controlling behavior. We will never have the relationship she craves because of how she behaved towards me as a teen and young adult, before I laid down boundaries.
I have a teen daughter. I tailor my response to what her ACTUAL problem is (which is often different from what the STATED problem is). If she picks fights after a late evening practice because she's exhausted and hungry... there is no point in responding. She's just going to escalate and it will turn into a huge thing if I lay down the law. She will remember it years later as coercion and cruelty, and she'll be right. My daughter is never rude when she's well-rested and fed. She can be short with us when stressed out right before a competition or major performance. She is making progress in that department and is immediately capable of self-reflection and apologies when I point it out. The fatigued&hungry rudeness has yet to improve, however, but I'm sure it will. The key is to come at this from a place of love, not "I have the power and I will crush you just because I can" perspective, which is what her father defaults to. My college-aged son, who is very respectful and my teen daughter, who is working towards that goal, have a close bond with me. Not so much with him! |