Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're already passed the point of "nipping it in the bud." This problem is already full bloom. Your mom isn't going to stop behavior that is so entrenched that it's part of her nightly repertoire, just because you have one conversation with her where you tell her you don't like it. The time to nip something in the bud is when it starts. You will now have to take a much stronger stance, especially since she has already turned this adversarial. You need to explain why what she is doing is unacceptable and you will need to tell her that FaceTime conversations will end immediately if she engages in this behavior. Then you have to enforce that. Every time she asks about getting a new toy, you immediately end the call.
This is a bit dramatic, it's OP's mom, not an enemy spy or a recalcitrant Jack Russell.
OP, just ask her outright "Why do you keep telling them they get presents from every store? It's a strange thing to say and if they believe you it will turn them into spoiled brats. I didn't get a present from every store, so I don't know where this is coming from. Knock it off, please."
I'm guessing you don't have a mother like this.
I don't, but given that OP came here to ask whether it was normal she obviously hasn't asked her to stop. I think it's strange to think so many people are advising her to go straight to training her like an unhousebroken puppy rather than see if a basic conversation will fix the problem. My mom isn't perfect and can't read my mind, but she is a thinking adult and if I ask her to do something differently with my kids she'll do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're already passed the point of "nipping it in the bud." This problem is already full bloom. Your mom isn't going to stop behavior that is so entrenched that it's part of her nightly repertoire, just because you have one conversation with her where you tell her you don't like it. The time to nip something in the bud is when it starts. You will now have to take a much stronger stance, especially since she has already turned this adversarial. You need to explain why what she is doing is unacceptable and you will need to tell her that FaceTime conversations will end immediately if she engages in this behavior. Then you have to enforce that. Every time she asks about getting a new toy, you immediately end the call.
This is a bit dramatic, it's OP's mom, not an enemy spy or a recalcitrant Jack Russell.
OP, just ask her outright "Why do you keep telling them they get presents from every store? It's a strange thing to say and if they believe you it will turn them into spoiled brats. I didn't get a present from every store, so I don't know where this is coming from. Knock it off, please."
I'm guessing you don't have a mother like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're already passed the point of "nipping it in the bud." This problem is already full bloom. Your mom isn't going to stop behavior that is so entrenched that it's part of her nightly repertoire, just because you have one conversation with her where you tell her you don't like it. The time to nip something in the bud is when it starts. You will now have to take a much stronger stance, especially since she has already turned this adversarial. You need to explain why what she is doing is unacceptable and you will need to tell her that FaceTime conversations will end immediately if she engages in this behavior. Then you have to enforce that. Every time she asks about getting a new toy, you immediately end the call.
This is a bit dramatic, it's OP's mom, not an enemy spy or a recalcitrant Jack Russell.
OP, just ask her outright "Why do you keep telling them they get presents from every store? It's a strange thing to say and if they believe you it will turn them into spoiled brats. I didn't get a present from every store, so I don't know where this is coming from. Knock it off, please."
Anonymous wrote:You're already passed the point of "nipping it in the bud." This problem is already full bloom. Your mom isn't going to stop behavior that is so entrenched that it's part of her nightly repertoire, just because you have one conversation with her where you tell her you don't like it. The time to nip something in the bud is when it starts. You will now have to take a much stronger stance, especially since she has already turned this adversarial. You need to explain why what she is doing is unacceptable and you will need to tell her that FaceTime conversations will end immediately if she engages in this behavior. Then you have to enforce that. Every time she asks about getting a new toy, you immediately end the call.
Anonymous wrote:The whole thing is unusual, including nightly calls.