Anonymous wrote:OP that stinks. But I agree with your DH. I would teach DD to just walk away.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have no way of knowing if it's an apple/tree situation. Kids that age experiment with language and it's rarely in a way that we want them to but it is a fairly normal developmental stage.
I recall a certain span of time in my early teen years when I used really foul language. It was a phase, I got over it, and I almost never use any curse words as an adult.
As a mom of boys (who don't curse that I know of but who knows), would I want to know if one of my boys called a girl the b word? Probably, yes. I wouldn't want the girl's mom to come at me though because that would be ridiculous. She would have to provide a fairly neutral relaying of facts. I would talk to my boys generally about language, in a way so that it wouldn't fly back at the girl in question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You definitely do not intervene at that age, particularly after the fact.
What are going to do, track them down and say what exactly? And what effect do you think that would have? What is the outcome you are looking for?
I just wanted to make sure our DD knew we had her back. Yeah I’m not changing the boys unless I can track down their parents (and probably apple tree situation anyway)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You definitely do not intervene at that age, particularly after the fact.
What are going to do, track them down and say what exactly? And what effect do you think that would have? What is the outcome you are looking for?
I just wanted to make sure our DD knew we had her back. Yeah I’m not changing the boys unless I can track down their parents (and probably apple tree situation anyway)
Anonymous wrote:You definitely do not intervene at that age, particularly after the fact.
What are going to do, track them down and say what exactly? And what effect do you think that would have? What is the outcome you are looking for?
Anonymous wrote:At our local community park where DD (14) goes often by herself to play basketball with her sister, there was some altercation with a group of boys who ended up calling her that name. Nothing else happened but DD was visibility upset. I wasn’t nearby it happened, and we couldn’t quite tell which group of boys it was afterwards, but DH did t want me to go yell at them for calling DD names as he is worried that would escalate a bullying situation — he feels DD is has stand up to them and that involving the parents with teens for name calling would make it worse. The boys parents were not there.
To be clear, he doesn’t think it’s a moral exercise where DD has to be strong enough, it’s more he believes us swooping in and yelling means next time they interact with this crowd at the park it would be worse and we wouldn’t likely be there.
I wanted to ream into them and DD just wanted to leave. So?
Anonymous wrote:At our local community park where DD (14) goes often by herself to play basketball with her sister, there was some altercation with a group of boys who ended up calling her that name. Nothing else happened but DD was visibility upset. I wasn’t nearby it happened, and we couldn’t quite tell which group of boys it was afterwards, but DH did t want me to go yell at them for calling DD names as he is worried that would escalate a bullying situation — he feels DD is has stand up to them and that involving the parents with teens for name calling would make it worse. The boys parents were not there.
To be clear, he doesn’t think it’s a moral exercise where DD has to be strong enough, it’s more he believes us swooping in and yelling means next time they interact with this crowd at the park it would be worse and we wouldn’t likely be there.
I wanted to ream into them and DD just wanted to leave. So?