Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You obviously have a daughter and never been in a group of boys playing. My very sweet sensitive 5yo boy will beat the sh!t out of DH if we let him. He loves his swords and nerf guns. And Taekwondo has been great for him. Except now he knows the proper way to kick and punch his friends when they start roughhousing.
I think saying he wants her to fall is just attention seeking. DS will say stuff like that just to see us react. Yes, he should be reminded that it’s not nice to say things like that. But it’s not a sign he actually wants that to happen or is some future serial killer.
This is OP, I actually do have a 10 yo son and two nephews and I live in the world where 50% of children are boys and I’ve never seen a kid be so nasty repeatedly towards another child (not just a once off frustrated comment but like snickering and evil). I guess my standards for boys are higher than you all. I was just more concerned about violent, targeted behavior of a younger sibling and the fact this kid would likely be in my kids school and be violent and abusive. People brushing off behavior as boys will be boys is why schools are in the situations they are in now with violence and shootings.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares? Parent the way you sees fit for your child and family. I always like to put myself in other peoples shoes. Maybe the kid has some behavioral or attitude problems. Maybe the playground is the only breather mom can get from her kids at the moment.
Anonymous wrote:“ I don’t care if she falls I want her to die” is not normal. I would not allow my kids to talk like this about each other. Also, if either of my kids called me dumb or a dumbie it would be the first and last time. This type of disrespect is terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some children are just violent by nature. I’m a nanny to a child who talks about killing / hurting people. It’s hard to change who someone is deep inside.
Yes you try and correct the behavior but in my experience it’s usually met with an even bigger wow statement. Example. Child says I hope you get hurt. Larlo that’s not nice you shouldn’t say that. Then larlo says I hope everyone dies I want to kill everyone. Sometimes correcting the behavior causes it to escalate.
you don't respond to a child's angry statement by saying "That's not nice and you shouldn't say that." You respond by probing why the child is so angry.
Child’s response; I’m angry because your so stupid and I hate you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some children are just violent by nature. I’m a nanny to a child who talks about killing / hurting people. It’s hard to change who someone is deep inside.
Yes you try and correct the behavior but in my experience it’s usually met with an even bigger wow statement. Example. Child says I hope you get hurt. Larlo that’s not nice you shouldn’t say that. Then larlo says I hope everyone dies I want to kill everyone. Sometimes correcting the behavior causes it to escalate.
you don't respond to a child's angry statement by saying "That's not nice and you shouldn't say that." You respond by probing why the child is so angry.
Anonymous wrote:Some children are just violent by nature. I’m a nanny to a child who talks about killing / hurting people. It’s hard to change who someone is deep inside.
Yes you try and correct the behavior but in my experience it’s usually met with an even bigger wow statement. Example. Child says I hope you get hurt. Larlo that’s not nice you shouldn’t say that. Then larlo says I hope everyone dies I want to kill everyone. Sometimes correcting the behavior causes it to escalate.
Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when parents let their kids watch the crap shows that they market to kids these days. We’re very strict about what our kids watch. We need to be!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have a boy and girl. My son never behaved like that. My daughter did. I was used to my sweet boy and had to adapt my parenting for my feisty girl!
Yes, it’s within the range of normal.
You call it feisty, I call it abusive (and yes 6 up’s can be both verbally and physically abusive). And no it’s not normal; your daughter has a serious problem you should address.