Anonymous wrote:I think it's a matter of being honest with yourself, combined with a bit of knowledge (child development, child psychology, etc.).
I know what parts of parenting I'm awesome at and what parts I'm weak on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding? Most people overestimate themselves... both their ability and their results.
Just look at all the kids you see around, and all the parents making all their excuses for their kids’ behavior. They hide behind buzz words like “age appropriate” but really they’re just bad parents.
Ironically, this post is a perfect illustration. A lot of parents are like this PP and think everyone ELSE is “doing it wrong.”
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding? Most people overestimate themselves... both their ability and their results.
Just look at all the kids you see around, and all the parents making all their excuses for their kids’ behavior. They hide behind buzz words like “age appropriate” but really they’re just bad parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always feel like I’m not quite “enough” as a parent. I’m utterly perplexed by people who seem confident as parents (and yeah, I’ve read a library of parenting/child development books). But parents can’t be perfect, kids aren’t programmable robots, and it never hurts to keep trying to be better.
I'm confident as a parent, and totally fine with not being perfect.
Anonymous wrote:I always feel like I’m not quite “enough” as a parent. I’m utterly perplexed by people who seem confident as parents (and yeah, I’ve read a library of parenting/child development books). But parents can’t be perfect, kids aren’t programmable robots, and it never hurts to keep trying to be better.