Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop it and address it.
“That comment is rude. If you don’t like calzones you can say nothing or ‘Would it be okay if I made a pbj sandwich instead for dinner?’ Try again and pick one of those options.”
If she says nothing, great. If she says she’ll make the sandwich, great.
If she argues with a different response, stop her immediately. “Again, I gave you two options. If you can’t choose one of those, then leave now.”
Set clear boundaries. Hold her accountable for rude behavior. Give her examples of the correct way to respond.
Rinse and repeat.
“Would it be ok if I…”. No. No. That is not the language a parent should use in this case. OP doesn’t need her daughter’s permission and she doesn’t need to serve an alternate food that is preapproved by DD.
Anonymous wrote:Stop it and address it.
“That comment is rude. If you don’t like calzones you can say nothing or ‘Would it be okay if I made a pbj sandwich instead for dinner?’ Try again and pick one of those options.”
If she says nothing, great. If she says she’ll make the sandwich, great.
If she argues with a different response, stop her immediately. “Again, I gave you two options. If you can’t choose one of those, then leave now.”
Set clear boundaries. Hold her accountable for rude behavior. Give her examples of the correct way to respond.
Rinse and repeat.
Anonymous wrote:DD 4th grade is just too spoiled. She’s really used to getting her way and if she doesn’t you better believe it will become a full-length feature! Take the other night for example. We were making calzones. However I guess she decided she hates calzones now, because she walked into the kitchen while I was laying out the ingredients and starts yelling, “Ew, I smell calzone,” that kinda thing. Another thing is she gets mad when her friends are better, like she lost a race to the fence post with a friend last week and I haven’t heard the end of it! DH and I have always put a value on teaching her humility and empathy so I’m just surprised. How to fix?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were not allowed to complain about dinner. But I grew up in a large family. What did she eat instead?
OP here, we have an “eat it or starve” style policy so she just had cereal. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Stop it and address it.
“That comment is rude. If you don’t like calzones you can say nothing or ‘Would it be okay if I made a pbj sandwich instead for dinner?’ Try again and pick one of those options.”
If she says nothing, great. If she says she’ll make the sandwich, great.
If she argues with a different response, stop her immediately. “Again, I gave you two options. If you can’t choose one of those, then leave now.”
Set clear boundaries. Hold her accountable for rude behavior. Give her examples of the correct way to respond.
Rinse and repeat.
Anonymous wrote:We were not allowed to complain about dinner. But I grew up in a large family. What did she eat instead?