Anonymous wrote:For the horrified among you, do you just eat your child’s party favors or Halloween candy without asking? I teach my children to share, I teach them that it’s okay that it’s okay to sometimes not share special items, and I teach them to respect others’ belongings.
OP, your husband is either crazy or really has some other complaint that lays behind his campaign.
Anonymous wrote:This is a boundary violation by your husband and you need to sit him down and tell him, and also have consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the horrified among you, do you just eat your child’s party favors or Halloween candy without asking? I teach my children to share, I teach them that it’s okay that it’s okay to sometimes not share special items, and I teach them to respect others’ belongings.
OP, your husband is either crazy or really has some other complaint that lays behind his campaign.
Yes. Most of us raid the Halloween candy without asking. Come on, you never went in for some after they went to bed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every mother should have a secret stash of her own chocolate that the vultures can’t get to. Your mistake was telling your DH you had it.
+1
I'll never tell a soul where my secret chocolate stash is, but I have one and no, I don't share. I'm allowed to have one thing that's solely for me.
Anonymous wrote:For the horrified among you, do you just eat your child’s party favors or Halloween candy without asking? I teach my children to share, I teach them that it’s okay that it’s okay to sometimes not share special items, and I teach them to respect others’ belongings.
OP, your husband is either crazy or really has some other complaint that lays behind his campaign.
Anonymous wrote:Mommy has special ice cream, special rolls, special chocolate, special risotto, special heirloom tomatoes, even special Medjool dates. She is the only vegetarian. Even DH knows to ask before drinking some of her Jonagold juice. If there is any doubt, the item in question is labeled. If there is suspicion of potential foul play, the item is photographed and marked to indicate how much had been consumed. Cookies are counted and logged so that Mommy knows precisely what amount of unauthorized consumption has occurred in her absence. Mommy's vengeance is swift and unerring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. It’s evil behavior. Two years ago DH bought me a fancy box of chocolates at Christmas. The kids devoured it. They don’t care if they are expensive or cheap. No one got angry. This year he bought two. One for the family and one he told me to hide in the bedroom. They are teens. Any food is gone in seconds.
I currently have a box of thin mints and Samoas hidden in my closest under sweaters. I’m not sure how many they already ate but these are mine! It would be crazy to keep them in the kitchen and expect no one else to eat them.
My mom kept Milano cookies in her underwear drawer (she may still for all I know!) I keep pricey Camembert behind the lettuce. I think it is 100% fine!
My kids love pricey Camembert cheese. Maybe because I let them have it as soon as they wanted. I think all of you who hide food or keep it for yourselves have issues.