Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Different phenotypes have different heritabilities. You can actually look this stuff up, if you’re interested in the research vs. what randos on the internet have to say.
And if you look at the research, what you find is that it is not nature OR nurture but always, always, some combination of both. Also lots of evidence that even highly heritable traits are influenced by environmental factors.
The idea that a child is just born violent or badly-behaved is in no way supported by scientific evidence, which shows that parents have a large degree of influence on behavior and temperament.
PP you’re quoting and yes, exactly. Now, there can be really awful, abusive (and neglectful) parents, and truly traumatizing environmental conditions. Those are the exceptions, though. On the flip side, people can be wonderful parents and still have kids who struggle. Again: nature interacting with nurture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Different phenotypes have different heritabilities. You can actually look this stuff up, if you’re interested in the research vs. what randos on the internet have to say.
And if you look at the research, what you find is that it is not nature OR nurture but always, always, some combination of both. Also lots of evidence that even highly heritable traits are influenced by environmental factors.
The idea that a child is just born violent or badly-behaved is in no way supported by scientific evidence, which shows that parents have a large degree of influence on behavior and temperament.
PP you’re quoting and yes, exactly. Now, there can be really awful, abusive (and neglectful) parents, and truly traumatizing environmental conditions. Those are the exceptions, though. On the flip side, people can be wonderful parents and still have kids who struggle. Again: nature interacting with nurture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Different phenotypes have different heritabilities. You can actually look this stuff up, if you’re interested in the research vs. what randos on the internet have to say.
And if you look at the research, what you find is that it is not nature OR nurture but always, always, some combination of both. Also lots of evidence that even highly heritable traits are influenced by environmental factors.
The idea that a child is just born violent or badly-behaved is in no way supported by scientific evidence, which shows that parents have a large degree of influence on behavior and temperament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Different phenotypes have different heritabilities. You can actually look this stuff up, if you’re interested in the research vs. what randos on the internet have to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Alternatively, your individual influence over children diminishes the more you have. Parents of onlies have immense influence. Parents of two kids must split their influence with the influence of a sibling dynamic. And so on. There are of course genetics at play, but all people are heavily influenced by their environment and in particular by the people around them.
I think one reason a lot of people will discount parental influence is because they don't understand how influence works. Like one dynamic I see a lot is the perfectionist parent who is always correcting and pushing their kid and then gets frustrated when their child does not respond by becoming exacting and hard working like them. But that's because the parent's behavior is making the child terrified of making mistakes, so the child learns to not try at all as a defense mechanism. The unintentional consequences of crappy parenting are often right in front of them, but the parent will say "huh, I guess this child is just genetically predisposed for laziness." So little self awareness.
How many kids do you have?
9
😂😂😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inconsistent parenting
I really struggle with consistency and boundaries as a parent. My kids have never hit me or yelled at me or anything like that. I can count on one hand the number of times they hit each other and it never happened past age 5 or so. They don’t throw fits over little disappointments.
I am sure these parents could use some parenting advice (I think we all could) but there is no way the “cause” of this is inconsistent parenting.
It’s always the cause. I’ve seen it a thousand times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Alternatively, your individual influence over children diminishes the more you have. Parents of onlies have immense influence. Parents of two kids must split their influence with the influence of a sibling dynamic. And so on. There are of course genetics at play, but all people are heavily influenced by their environment and in particular by the people around them.
I think one reason a lot of people will discount parental influence is because they don't understand how influence works. Like one dynamic I see a lot is the perfectionist parent who is always correcting and pushing their kid and then gets frustrated when their child does not respond by becoming exacting and hard working like them. But that's because the parent's behavior is making the child terrified of making mistakes, so the child learns to not try at all as a defense mechanism. The unintentional consequences of crappy parenting are often right in front of them, but the parent will say "huh, I guess this child is just genetically predisposed for laziness." So little self awareness.
How many kids do you have?
9
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inconsistent parenting
I really struggle with consistency and boundaries as a parent. My kids have never hit me or yelled at me or anything like that. I can count on one hand the number of times they hit each other and it never happened past age 5 or so. They don’t throw fits over little disappointments.
I am sure these parents could use some parenting advice (I think we all could) but there is no way the “cause” of this is inconsistent parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The part about scratching and bruising their parents makes me think that there is a mental health issue and not just a parenting issue. Even parents who are bad at discipline and boundaries Won’t have kids scratching their faces and bruising them.
When I first met the mom, she had some scratches. I thought she had a cat. Later learned the kid scratched her. Kid was a toddler so I thought nothing of it. It is many years later and oldest is now 9. Dad had scratches and bruises recently from the girl. I have seen both girls have massive screaming throwing fits over very small things like food not being exactly how she wanted it or flavor ice cream ran out.
What you describe goes beyond "difficult personality," OP. Especially if the parents haven't figured out in all these years how to reduce the physical aggression, something's up (something you're not aware of). Situations that extreme are almost always some combination of genes and environment.
Probably a lot less environment and a lot more genes.
The more children you have, the more you realize how little influence you actually have.
Alternatively, your individual influence over children diminishes the more you have. Parents of onlies have immense influence. Parents of two kids must split their influence with the influence of a sibling dynamic. And so on. There are of course genetics at play, but all people are heavily influenced by their environment and in particular by the people around them.
I think one reason a lot of people will discount parental influence is because they don't understand how influence works. Like one dynamic I see a lot is the perfectionist parent who is always correcting and pushing their kid and then gets frustrated when their child does not respond by becoming exacting and hard working like them. But that's because the parent's behavior is making the child terrified of making mistakes, so the child learns to not try at all as a defense mechanism. The unintentional consequences of crappy parenting are often right in front of them, but the parent will say "huh, I guess this child is just genetically predisposed for laziness." So little self awareness.
How many kids do you have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inconsistent parenting
I really struggle with consistency and boundaries as a parent. My kids have never hit me or yelled at me or anything like that. I can count on one hand the number of times they hit each other and it never happened past age 5 or so. They don’t throw fits over little disappointments.
I am sure these parents could use some parenting advice (I think we all could) but there is no way the “cause” of this is inconsistent parenting.
It’s always the cause. I’ve seen it a thousand times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inconsistent parenting
I really struggle with consistency and boundaries as a parent. My kids have never hit me or yelled at me or anything like that. I can count on one hand the number of times they hit each other and it never happened past age 5 or so. They don’t throw fits over little disappointments.
I am sure these parents could use some parenting advice (I think we all could) but there is no way the “cause” of this is inconsistent parenting.