Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crying is good for you.
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with crying in the privacy of your own home?
Anonymous wrote:If your son is only crying at home, and not in public, then I don't see the problem. He's upset. Tears are a way of both expressing that and managing it. I always feel better after I cry.
You can try to help him see that crying when his siblings tease him only makes them tease him more, and so he can try not to cry in front of them, as a strategy, but please don't teach him not to cry or that crying is something to be ashamed of.
Anonymous wrote:This. He feels safe at home, and this he's a preteen. Let him get it out. Nothing wrong with crying.
SHUT UP, SHUT UP, SHUT UP!
You are ALL WRONG!
You are doing your sons NO FAVORS with this kind of talk!
Teach them that MEN DO NOT CRY. Period. Not even at home. Doing so only earns contempt, not sympathy.
You know very well that if your husband cried in the privacy of your home, you would not say "oh no problem, nothing wrong, no shame in crying." You would despise him.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think you should be encouraging this message that he shouldn't cry. Even if you have good intentions, it just further entrenches this mindset that men don't cry.
Talk to him about how it's okay to cry, it's okay to want privacy while he cries, and teach him some alternative coping mechanisms that don't boil down to "you are a man so hide your emotions". Tell him it's always okay to talk to you about these frustrations and get advice too.
He's clearly an emotional kid, and crying is a great way to get that frustration out. I think if teenage boys spent more time crying and emotionally venting, they'd spend less time on more dangerous externalizing behaviours (drinking, fighting, punching walls...) Of course, society needs to encourage this first...
Anonymous wrote:If your son is only crying at home, and not in public, then I don't see the problem. He's upset. Tears are a way of both expressing that and managing it. I always feel better after I cry.
Anonymous wrote:Crying is good for you.
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with crying in the privacy of your own home?
Anonymous wrote:If your son is only crying at home, and not in public, then I don't see the problem. He's upset. Tears are a way of both expressing that and managing it. I always feel better after I cry.
You can try to help him see that crying when his siblings tease him only makes them tease him more, and so he can try not to cry in front of them, as a strategy, but please don't teach him not to cry or that crying is something to be ashamed of.
Anonymous wrote:This. He feels safe at home, and this he's a preteen. Let him get it out. Nothing wrong with crying.
Anonymous wrote:Start with whooping the big brother's ass? That will help.