Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course I would say something to the other child! I have told other children that they were being unkind or that I didn't like something they said or did to my kids. First and foremost, I want my kids to know that I have their back and model the responses that I want them to copy.
OP here. I totally agree. I want my son to know that I'm standing up for him. But when I've done that in the past (said something along the lines of "that wasn't a nice thing to say"), the parent has given me a nasty look (while saying nothing at all to their child), so I wanted to double-check with DCUM if this is okay.
My question is why do parents say nothing in these situations?????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course I would say something to the other child! I have told other children that they were being unkind or that I didn't like something they said or did to my kids. First and foremost, I want my kids to know that I have their back and model the responses that I want them to copy.
OP here. I totally agree. I want my son to know that I'm standing up for him. But when I've done that in the past (said something along the lines of "that wasn't a nice thing to say"), the parent has given me a nasty look (while saying nothing at all to their child), so I wanted to double-check with DCUM if this is okay.
My question is why do parents say nothing in these situations?????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kid is saying things “suck” and his mom is letting that go? Wow.
I would absolutely say something. “Wow, that was a mean thing to say. I know your a more kind boy than that!” I’d pair that with otherwise being extra kind to him and giving positive feedback when the opportunity arises. “Look how Larlo shared the ball with you! Larlo, you’re such a good friend. We love hanging out with you when you play like that!”. You don’t have to make a huge deal about it when he’s rude - don’t give him the attention he wants (in fact, I’d follow the “wow, that was mean” with pointedly ignoring him), but do let him know it’s not okay with you.
If his mom has a problem with that, so be it. If she distances herself from you, no big loss, and you’ll be doing the kid a favor.
OP here. Ok this is a good plan. Yes the mom lets these things go. Which is why I have distanced myself for 1.5 years but I feel like I can give her a second chance. I don't blame the boy, I blame her poor parenting skills for letting his mean comments go on like that (and he even says things like this to adults!).
Anonymous wrote:Of course I would say something to the other child! I have told other children that they were being unkind or that I didn't like something they said or did to my kids. First and foremost, I want my kids to know that I have their back and model the responses that I want them to copy.
Anonymous wrote:The kid is saying things “suck” and his mom is letting that go? Wow.
I would absolutely say something. “Wow, that was a mean thing to say. I know your a more kind boy than that!” I’d pair that with otherwise being extra kind to him and giving positive feedback when the opportunity arises. “Look how Larlo shared the ball with you! Larlo, you’re such a good friend. We love hanging out with you when you play like that!”. You don’t have to make a huge deal about it when he’s rude - don’t give him the attention he wants (in fact, I’d follow the “wow, that was mean” with pointedly ignoring him), but do let him know it’s not okay with you.
If his mom has a problem with that, so be it. If she distances herself from you, no big loss, and you’ll be doing the kid a favor.
Anonymous wrote:Yes you can say something but some of these are going to be observations as he tries to make sense of the world yet may seem blunt to an adult. For example: he’s wearing water wings - that’s a fact he’s noticing. I cringe when my kid points out some kid has training wheels or whatever but they don’t understand it’s something someone might be insecure about.