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General Parenting Discussion
Reply to "Shocking 6 yo behavior at playground"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]As the parent of a child that behaves like this I can tell you that he’s been in therapy for years. Yes he has mental illnesses. He is medicated and has been inpatient numerous times—the first when he was 6. As a family, we’ve been dealing with this for a long time. What you heard was jarring to you because you’ve never heard it before. As a someone that lives with this day in and day out, I know when my son is saying out of control things with intent and when he is just looking for attention. His siblings also know. The behavior wasn’t impacting you. As others have said, you don’t have to invite the kid over for a playdate. And to the poster that commented about raising a sociopath—you have no idea. The mental health crisis in this country is horrific. I’m in support groups with parents that have kids sitting in ERs for WEEKS. The hospitals are trying to discharge the kids to the parents and the parents are saying they won’t take them home; that they need help. The public doesn’t see all the help that parents try to get for their children only to find that help is not available. OP—no it’s not NT behavior. I hope you never have to experience the judgement of someone like you as you do your best to parent the kid you have. May your family never have to deal with mental health issues.[/quote] For some kids its mental illness, some kids its parenting. The difference is you got your child help and these parents are ignoring it. If your kids behave like that in public, you don't take them out.[/quote] I would disagree with that. What you’re advocating is that people who are different shouldn’t be seen in public. That’s pretty old school thinking. As a society, we need to be accepting of all types of people. If they aren’t hurting your family, let them be.[/quote] I don’t agree that the behavior wasn’t affecting OP’s child, and surely the “I want you to die” comment was affecting the child’s sibling. It’s not harmless for a child to be exposed to verbal abuse, it’s highly distressing, and we don’t want children growing up to think that sort of targeted, hurtful language towards others is in bounds. Certainly the nerf stuff and roughhousing is a different category altogether, and much more typical behavior. [/quote] PP, you remind me of some friends of ours who did not meet up with us for the weekend when they came to DC, I later found out, because it would have been "too distressing and sad" for their 5 year old to deal with our kid's disability. There are disabled persons in the world. They exist. I have no idea if this kid has special needs, is having a bad day, is a brat, or whatever. [b]But it's not this family's responsibility to alter their lives so that your little precious is not affected. It's your responsibility to teach your child about disabilities and answer your child's questions[/b].[/quote] Yea, I used to be all woke and thought it was important to expose my child to various disabilities. Then a mentally disabled, MUCH bigger boy seriously hurt my child at the playground. It was traumatic for her and could have hurt her very badly. Parent was oblivious, was sitting on a bench playing on their phone. Same thing happened in a class DD was in, a much larger boy kept hitting and hurting her. When I asked the instructor and parent to intervene, I was told he was autistic. I don't care, a safe environment needs to be provided for other children. I threw a fit and now the boy has to sit out or leave when he misbehaves. Class is much more pleasant for us all now. Sorry, but my kid doesn't exist to be a punching bag for someone else's little precious. If it's a dangerous kid, they need to be handled accordingly. [/quote]
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