I do too. Sometimes I tell them that they talk too much, please close your mouth. It drives me crazy when they keep talking nonstop to bomb my brain with high pitches. |
No dear god, PLEASE tell them when they are annoying. For all the rest of us and those who will be stuck working with them in the future.
Focus on how what they're doing impacts others. That gets them in the frame of mind of thinking of themselves and their actions and how they affect others. |
We do it all the time. When someone is being annoying, someone else will invariably say “annoying”. I mean really, who wants their kid to grow up to be annoying. |
If you tell a child they're being annoying you might break them permanently! |
Agree with everyone saying it's fine to point out annoying behavior, just label the behavior and not the person. If kids aren't told a behavior is annoying, how are they going to improve? Chris Rock had a bit about this in one of his stand-up specials. It was crass, but hilarious, and the underlying point was that nobody is going to care about you as much as your family does. And stop doing your kids a disservice by telling them how special they are and that they can do no wrong. |
Exactly--communicating your feelings not only tells them that their behavior is unacceptable, but models how they can tell others when their behavior is unacceptable. I have a 9-, 6-, and 3-year-old, and this has been my method for years. It seems to be successful for my kids. I teach PreK, and we teach the students how to solve problems by sharing their feelings and communicating with people who are bothering them (versus acting out). "I don't like it when you..." or "It bothers [annoys] me when you..." is textbook. "You are annoying," "I don't like you right now," etc are completely different and horrible, hurtful things to say to a child. I'm sorry your mom said that to you, PP. |
No. Depends on your tone. But, if they're being annoying I will tell them. A 5 year old is old enough to know better and be aware of their own behavior. |
You're quoting me, and I want to clarify that I agree about telling the kid there is a problem with the behavior! In case that wasn't clear. ![]() |
Just say "it is annoying when YOU or anyone else do X", not "YOU are annoying". Simple. |
I think a sibling telling another sibling that they are annoying is acceptable, if it's a rare thing. A parent, no.
"annoying behavior", not the person being annoying, might be acceptable IF that slips out. |
I think parents have an obligation to let there children know when they are annoying or obnoxious. Sociery will certainly let them know when they are older. Its whats wrong woth the world now. Kids who were never taught how to interact with othersor who never had there feelings hurt. |
Have patience but do tell them when certain behaviors are annoying. Focus on the behavior; not the child. |
I'm sure that hurt! but "I don't like what you are doing right now. You are jumping on the bed after I made it and I don't like it. Please stop." should NOT be hurtful. A parent is allowed to say that what someone is doing is annoying, mean, hurtful, too loud, too soft, etc. etc - that's how we grow and learn! |
I have been known to tell my 5 year old "You're being so annoying right now" or "You're really getting on my nerves right now."
His self esteem remains high, because I also tell him when I'm impressed that he knows something or that I noticed him being particularly kind to his sibling, or that I'm proud of him for mastering a new skill, etc. |
“You know I love you, no matter what you do. Right now, I’m getting very annoyed. I don’t like when you do x and ignore when I ask you to stop. So, how are we going to handle this?”
I wait for input. If they won’t choose to stop the behavior, I remove myself from the behavior. Sometimes that means pulling into a parking lot and moving into the front passenger seat (kicking the seat). Sometimes it means getting out of the room or vehicle (noises). Nothing lasts long, and the less attention I give the behavior, the less it happens later. With that said, something else inevitably crops up, because... kids. Of course, I’m someone who has no problem missing whatever to show a child that they control their actions, not other people’s environment or actions. |