| I mean this kindly - if you are that affected by people’s opinion of you, you need to stop engaging online. Online forums, especially anonymous ones, bring out the cranks and the quick-judgers. And if people IRL are making you feel like this, stop engaging with them too. Spend more time with the parents from your class, who will be supportive. If you truly think you are doing your best, then stop caring what other people think. |
| People never think their child is easy (unless they have multiples and a hard one is among them). People think they are superior parents. |
Some people do have better temperaments to be parents. Are more informed, are better able to hold a boundary, are more patient, etc. Some have more time, or more energy or both. Just as not all kids are the same, not all parents are and some are really really terrible. Some are abusive and some are just plain lazy. |
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1000% |
You and your beleaguered cohort are absolutely projecting based on very limited information. It’s right there in what you’ve written. |
Ok fine - every child is equally hard / difficult to parent. If every parent would just apply 1-2-3 magic exactly as you do (or whatever you do) all the children would act exactly as yours does. There is no innate difference in energy levels, stubbornness, drive to please, self control, or over stimulation. |
Are you new here? There are SO many posts where people have done none of that and have no interest in doing it. Also, people post advice from their own viewpoint, which is likely all they know. Sorry you have a tough kid, but if you're going to get upset about the advice random internet people give on here...perhaps this isn't the place for you. |
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I think you truly don’t know unless you have experienced it. Perhaps some observant, empathetic people may be able to put themselves in other people’s shoes, but it’s hard because it really takes a lot of time to understand the personality and quirks of other people’s kids.
I had a coworker who complained that when she came back from maternity leave with her 4th she was exhausted because the baby didn’t sleep through the night. I commiserated because one of mine took 10 months and the other one didn’t sleep all night for over 2 years. She looked at me like I had 2 heads. She literally had No Idea that was possible. Her first 3 kids slept through the night by 8-10 weeks! |
| Some people get sheep kids, others get lions |
+1. I replied to the “rude 7 year old” thread in response to someone who insisted that all 7 year olds go through a phase where they tell their parents to shut up. Parents have depth of knowledge, but it’s very narrow, just limited to their own kids. When you ask a forum for advice, you are getting individual opinions based on limited life experiences. You have to parse the opinions to see the spectrum. Speak to trained professionals who have seen a breadth of experiences for a more balanced view. And know that many posters say things with the intention of insulting and criticizing others, while aggrandizing their own situations. My mom worked in childcare and the number of posters who insist that their 2 year old never hits, bites, snatches or pushes other kids is just laughable. |
It is normal for a kid to want to run around and it’s normal to have to be up and moving the entire time you are out in public with a toddler. And yes it is hard. It would never occur to me that it’s a bad thing though. |
Some parents are also better supported. They may actually have worse temperaments to be parents, but they have nearby family or plenty of money to outsource some of the toughest aspects of parenting. I have found that people who claim that parenting is easy or who responds to someone who is struggling with some aspect of parenting with condescension or superiority, often fall in this category. The very best parents I know, the ones who have amazing temperaments for raising kids, who are incredibly patient, have energy for all of it, etc., would also be the FIRST people to tell you that parenting is hard, that sometimes it breaks you, and that no one, and I mean no one, does it perfectly all the time. I think this is actually a mark of a good parent because it demonstrates a bunch of personal skills that are so useful in parenting, like having self-compassion and empathy for others, recognizing the perfect is the enemy of the good, being able to be honest about hard truths, and having humility and self-awareness. All of that will help you be the best possible parent to a child, whether super easy or super tough. And it also generally makes you a better friend and support to other parents, even when they don't have the same skill set or may struggle more than you do. Some parents are abusive (mine were!) but these are generally not the parents who are asking for advice on a parenting website or who are self-aware enough about what is happening in their homes to even be able to admit they are struggling. My observation is that often the parents who seem like they are struggling the most are often much better parents than they give themselves credit for. They are hard on themselves because they care so much, and because they really take the responsibility of raising children seriously. That's not laziness. |
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This is why I hate Janet Lansbury and the cult of gentle parenting. Of course I agree it’s damaging to yell at, shame, and physically punish kids. But my issue is the way She describes her techniques and her genuine expectation that kids will just comply after 2-3 days of consistent gentle boundaries. The first time I tried one of her techniques for holding a boundary I tried for over a month every single day with no results. She claimed it works in 2-3 days. I’ve never felt lonelier. Having a difficult, strong-willed kid is like parenting on a different planet where you are totally on your own because no advice or conventional wisdom works for you, and no one has any sympathy for you because they just assume you’re a spineless idiot doing everything wrong.
So ya, I agree with OP. |
I agree most parents are working hard, but if you are truly close with someone that has easier kids and you have a harder one or one with special needs over time you REALLY see the difference. I mean, with one of my friends it is like we are in different worlds. We talk daily so I know a lot about their days and know her kids really well. They both really fall into the want to please category of kids, which sure it may cause some things they have to work through in the future as teens or adults but from a parenting perspective BOY is it easier. I'm not saying parenting still doesn't require work. She still has to make them breakfast every morning, get them to school, think about camp sign up, deal with a tantrum here and there, it is still a lot! But I'm telling you it is absolutely not the same as doing all that PLUS a kid who needs extra support or who will fight you tooth and nail for most things. I have one easy and one hard. My "easy" kid's tantrums were a hilarious walk in the park in comparison as a toddler. Its like tantrum, I'm upset, and then it is over. Yeah it is slightly unpleasant but with a few tools, the child responds and boom you're moving on. If you only have kids that tantrum like that you don't really realize what it is like to have a kid with special needs or in that strong willed category. WHOLE DIFFERENT BALL GAME. Anyway, I completely agree with you op. |