Anonymous wrote:I have a bit of this dynamic too made a bit more obvious by the personalities of the same age cousins. Early on I did react and it came off as defensive. It gave my sibling an affirming reaction. Now, I do not show a hint of a reaction to any comments or comparisons. It helps that my kid who was a hellion when younger is clearly more mature, well spoken, etc than his cousin. Living under constant rigidity means the kid won’t talk to you or trust you and being a submissive follower is how kids get in trouble in high school.
Anonymous wrote:My sister has a very authoritarian parenting style. Very strict, harsh, rigid. In contrast, our parenting style is a bit more relaxed. Certainly not permissive or gentle by any means, but we are definitely not parenting by injecting fear into the relationship, expecting our child to be completely submissive. My parents parented that way and to this day, I feel like that's why we don't have a super close relationship. It was hard for me to make the switch from a tension filled childhood environment to a close one as an adult.
We have high expectations of our child, while she is not perfect (no kid is) she is very well behaved overall. We've never had a complaint about her from any adult in her life - we generally get glowing feedback on her behavior.
My sister has recently made it very known that she disapproves of our parenting style and claims my child's behavior is atrocious. The most egregious examples she can point to are a couple instances of slight back talk. I am dreading family events going forward as I know we are being judged and critiqued. How would you handle this going forward?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just tell her to shut it politely but firmly. Repeat as often as needed.
This has been an ongoing narrative from her for the past 5ish years. This last time, she was much more aggressive and mean about it. Called my child names, accused her of saying things I can never picture her saying (and my child denies). Quite literally, she is the only adult that has ever voiced concerns about my child's behavior (and therefore my parenting). Unfortunately, she has pushed me too far this time and I need to apparently be more firm or cut off contact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just tell her to shut it politely but firmly. Repeat as often as needed.
This has been an ongoing narrative from her for the past 5ish years. This last time, she was much more aggressive and mean about it. Called my child names, accused her of saying things I can never picture her saying (and my child denies). Quite literally, she is the only adult that has ever voiced concerns about my child's behavior (and therefore my parenting). Unfortunately, she has pushed me too far this time and I need to apparently be more firm or cut off contact.
Tell her that.
I have. She told me she didn't believe that.