Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eye rolls don’t fly in our house. They are up there with pointing a finger in someone’s face in terms of disrespect. Not acceptable at all.
So what do you do if your child rolls their eyes? What would the consequence be?
Anonymous wrote:I always ignore the eye rolls and the muttering under the breathe AS LONG AS THEY DO WHAT I'M TELLING THEM.
Me: Go clean your room
Kid mumbling as she walks off to clean her room: Why don't YOU go clean YOUR room?
I let that go. Because she's going to clean her room.
Anonymous wrote:Eye rolls don’t fly in our house. They are up there with pointing a finger in someone’s face in terms of disrespect. Not acceptable at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I often see the advice to ignore teens when they are eye-rolling or talking back because this is just them asserting their independence or practicing breaking away.
Mine are still young and just entering the eye-roll stage. My question is, how do you know when to ignore and when to say it's unacceptable.
I want to be compassionate to what they're going through but don't want to someone who thinks it's ok to be a jerk, or a know-it-all.
You can stop the eye rolling now. “Larlo, I just watched you roll your eyes. That’s disrespectful. You don’t have to like what I’m saying, but you do have to be respectful. You’re welcome to roll your eyes all you want in your room or the bathroom. But in this family, it’s never going to be okay to do it in response to someone in the same space.”
Far too many words.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I often see the advice to ignore teens when they are eye-rolling or talking back because this is just them asserting their independence or practicing breaking away.
Mine are still young and just entering the eye-roll stage. My question is, how do you know when to ignore and when to say it's unacceptable.
I want to be compassionate to what they're going through but don't want to someone who thinks it's ok to be a jerk, or a know-it-all.
You can stop the eye rolling now. “Larlo, I just watched you roll your eyes. That’s disrespectful. You don’t have to like what I’m saying, but you do have to be respectful. You’re welcome to roll your eyes all you want in your room or the bathroom. But in this family, it’s never going to be okay to do it in response to someone in the same space.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I often see the advice to ignore teens when they are eye-rolling or talking back because this is just them asserting their independence or practicing breaking away.
Mine are still young and just entering the eye-roll stage. My question is, how do you know when to ignore and when to say it's unacceptable.
I want to be compassionate to what they're going through but don't want to someone who thinks it's ok to be a jerk, or a know-it-all.
You can stop the eye rolling now. “Larlo, I just watched you roll your eyes. That’s disrespectful. You don’t have to like what I’m saying, but you do have to be respectful. You’re welcome to roll your eyes all you want in your room or the bathroom. But in this family, it’s never going to be okay to do it in response to someone in the same space.”
Anonymous wrote:I often see the advice to ignore teens when they are eye-rolling or talking back because this is just them asserting their independence or practicing breaking away.
Mine are still young and just entering the eye-roll stage. My question is, how do you know when to ignore and when to say it's unacceptable.
I want to be compassionate to what they're going through but don't want to someone who thinks it's ok to be a jerk, or a know-it-all.