Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the PPs. Euthanizing the dog is part of being a responsible animal owner. It’s okay if she’s upset about it. You’re the adult. Do it, explain it, and let her be upset about it. She’ll understand it later. I might give her the option of being present or saying goodbye before the process.
Anonymous wrote:9 is a child. I don’t understand parents who rush kids out of their childhoods. Give her the gift of not having adult worries like responsible pet ownership and tell her it died peacefully while she was at school. Give her a chance to say goodbye by telling her you think the end is really close. But if you can spare her a little heartache, if you really think it would upset her, why wouldn’t you
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the PPs. Euthanizing the dog is part of being a responsible animal owner. It’s okay if she’s upset about it. You’re the adult. Do it, explain it, and let her be upset about it. She’ll understand it later. I might give her the option of being present or saying goodbye before the process.
Anonymous wrote:Flash forward a couple years. Your daughter is at a friends house when the friend’s uncle touches her inappropriately.
Do you want her to say to herself “ugh, if I tell my parents this is going to be a whole big thing. Lots of follow up questions, lots of emotions, regret, etc. It will be much easier to just tell them I don’t like that friend anymore, never go to her house again, and warn all our other friends so they don’t go either.” Or do you want her to tell you the raw, difficult truth?
You can’t expect honesty about tough things from your children if you’re unwilling to show them the same courtesy and model how difficult, emotional conversations can be approached.
If she were 5 or 6, I could respect the white lie in this moment. But a 9 year old can handle this.
Anonymous wrote:Flash forward a couple years. Your daughter is at a friends house when the friend’s uncle touches her inappropriately.
Do you want her to say to herself “ugh, if I tell my parents this is going to be a whole big thing. Lots of follow up questions, lots of emotions, regret, etc. It will be much easier to just tell them I don’t like that friend anymore, never go to her house again, and warn all our other friends so they don’t go either.” Or do you want her to tell you the raw, difficult truth?
You can’t expect honesty about tough things from your children if you’re unwilling to show them the same courtesy and model how difficult, emotional conversations can be approached.
If she were 5 or 6, I could respect the white lie in this moment. But a 9 year old can handle this.
Anonymous wrote: I tried to prepare my 9.5 year old today and she is horrified that we would kill our beloved pet. So I'm talking to her about quality of life and how we must do the kind thing ... but I'm also hedging by saying the dog could pass on her own.
Anonymous wrote:Flash forward a couple years. Your daughter is at a friends house when the friend’s uncle touches her inappropriately.
Do you want her to say to herself “ugh, if I tell my parents this is going to be a whole big thing. Lots of follow up questions, lots of emotions, regret, etc. It will be much easier to just tell them I don’t like that friend anymore, never go to her house again, and warn all our other friends so they don’t go either.” Or do you want her to tell you the raw, difficult truth?
You can’t expect honesty about tough things from your children if you’re unwilling to show them the same courtesy and model how difficult, emotional conversations can be approached.
If she were 5 or 6, I could respect the white lie in this moment. But a 9 year old can handle this.