Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am i the picky who thinks that is a good thing? That sounds like healthy boundary
Yeah, but the poor preschooler is trapped in that family until adulthood. It will be a traumatic upbringing, for sure. The kid is the canary in ops dysfunctional coal mine.
Anonymous wrote:Am i the picky who thinks that is a good thing? That sounds like healthy boundary
Anonymous wrote:I swear I’m not a troll and Idgaf about the culture wars or anything like that.
My preschooler is delightful, brave, and kind. I love them and we have what I think is a pretty secure and gentle but authoritative parenting style. We have rules and boundaries and consequences. But we almost never raise our voices. Like, almost never. And I’ve realized that if I raise my voice at my kiddo at all, they burst into tears.
Today it was a push on the stairs in a bad moment. I said “we do not push on the stairs” in I mean, a loud and stern voice. It’s the voice I would use on a dog doing something naughty. It wasn’t out of control angry or anything. I think it was totally appropriate given the importance of not pushing on the stairs. It caused a full meltdown of tears and general despair.
Is this just an age phase? Or am I creating a kid who isn’t going to be able to play sports or work in a firehouse or whatever? I don’t need to worry about this, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really hard to tell from your question, but one data point - I know a kid like this, and from my perspective, she’s pretty emotionally coddled. I’m all for giving kids space to express and process their emotions and to validate them, but ANY thing this kid feels is taken as the Number 1 Priority in the moment. She’s an only child, four years old, and if she’s sad about something, both parents drop everything and are there soothing and consoling her and talking to her and hugging her, and it’s like, dude, she dropped a cracker. She’ll live.
She’s also a bit anxious, and I think her parents inadvertently reinforce it by being overly accommodating. If she’s “too scared” to do something, then they just cancel the whole thing.
No idea if it’s a similar situation with you, but two things to look out for.
Uh, you know you are talking about a 4 year old, right? It's okay to not force your 4 year old to sit through a movie they find to scary or not fore them to go on the ferris wheel. Or to console them when they are sad, even if it's about something like a cracker that fell on the ground. They are 4.
If you were talking about a 10 year old and they were doing all this, I'd see your point. But 4? That's like saying parents are "coddling" a baby by soothing him when he cries.
Anonymous wrote:Really hard to tell from your question, but one data point - I know a kid like this, and from my perspective, she’s pretty emotionally coddled. I’m all for giving kids space to express and process their emotions and to validate them, but ANY thing this kid feels is taken as the Number 1 Priority in the moment. She’s an only child, four years old, and if she’s sad about something, both parents drop everything and are there soothing and consoling her and talking to her and hugging her, and it’s like, dude, she dropped a cracker. She’ll live.
She’s also a bit anxious, and I think her parents inadvertently reinforce it by being overly accommodating. If she’s “too scared” to do something, then they just cancel the whole thing.
No idea if it’s a similar situation with you, but two things to look out for.