Anonymous wrote:It is about teaching your children to respect the property of other people. Personally, we bought high end furniture from beginning because I was reared in a home with high end furniture and we were not allowed to behave as feral animals and our children were trated the same. It is a waste of money to buy cheap junk furniture. You are judged by how your children behave and how they respect the property of other people!
Anonymous wrote:So I’m at my cousin’s house. She has two little ones, 5 and 3. These kids are allowed to jump on the couch, jump onto it by scaling the back. They’ll go from a trot on the floor, up, and into a trot along the couch cushions. Not once has my cousin told them to stop, and yes, she witnesses it happening.
What’s up with parents who allow their kids disrespect furniture? It makes me feel older than 36, but I’m appalled! I’d never let my kids do this, nor would they even try to do this.
Anonymous wrote:My step grandchildren are teens and they stand and climb on my new sectional. Their parents never correct them because they play and hang their legs over the backs of the sofa. I’ve seen the parents walk across sectionals before, too. I can’t understand why they feel this is appropriate. When sitting at the dining room table, they put their feet on their chairs and their knees are up. How does one deal with a group like this?
Anonymous wrote:It is about teaching your children to respect the property of other people. Personally, we bought high end furniture from beginning because I was reared in a home with high end furniture and we were not allowed to behave as feral animals and our children were trated the same. It is a waste of money to buy cheap junk furniture. You are judged by how your children behave and how they respect the property of other people!
Anonymous wrote:People keep saying “get back to us when you have kids!” but weren’t we all kids at one time? I never did this to my parents’ furniture as a kid. Y’all were jumping all over your furniture growing up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a neat freak (people always comment on how clean my house is). I grew up in a very conservative environment where I wouldn’t have ever even considered putting my bare feet on the couch. I let my three kids jump all over the damn couch and in fact I bought a sectional with multiple pieces so they could move them around for obstacle courses. It horrified some guests but it’s good for my kids and they’re not hurting each other or anything I care about so why not. Kids need to move. Like others have said, they 100% know not to go to someone else’s house and start jumping.
I realize moms in particular have an actual blind eye to the behavior of their kids in public, but this takes the cake. No, I promise they do not know not to do this. I host play dates all the time and it’s appalling how some kids act. I feel terrible for them because they’re not being taught social norms at home, but this makes more sense when people like you think they don’t have to teach their kids boundaries yet fully believe their kids know boundaries outside the walls of their house. Hysterical.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a neat freak (people always comment on how clean my house is). I grew up in a very conservative environment where I wouldn’t have ever even considered putting my bare feet on the couch. I let my three kids jump all over the damn couch and in fact I bought a sectional with multiple pieces so they could move them around for obstacle courses. It horrified some guests but it’s good for my kids and they’re not hurting each other or anything I care about so why not. Kids need to move. Like others have said, they 100% know not to go to someone else’s house and start jumping.