Anonymous wrote:OP here,
Like many of you, I thought this was something that I could just skip around. That's obvious, right? However, DC is gifted just enough to detect my attempts to avoid the conversation. But, she is also very much the typical emotional three-year old.
So I think I need to develop a straightforward plan. Something that's clear and avoids the possibility of backtracking.
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
Like many of you, I thought this was something that I could just skip around. That's obvious, right? However, DC is gifted just enough to detect my attempts to avoid the conversation. But, she is also very much the typical emotional three-year old.
So I think I need to develop a straightforward plan. Something that's clear and avoids the possibility of backtracking.
Anonymous wrote:Plan for what you will tell her when she is older, but try to understand where her questions are coming from in a very young mind. There all kinds of families, and she is trying to piece together hers. Simple and matter of fact as other PPs have said.
Get some story books that show all kinds of families ("Every Baby Everywhere" is a nice board book that shows it without saying it), and when you see one that is just mom and child, say -- hey, that is like me and Grandma.
Save the absent father/infidelity/sex messes up lives even as it creates them part for when she is thinking about having sex as a teen, if you want to share that part of the story with her.