Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband would beat the shit out of his child if he ever disrespected his mother
I'd beat the shit out of my kids if they talk to DW that way.
My DH once called his mom a bitch and his dad swung around and tried kicking him , DH ducked for cover and tbe hole in his bedroom wall remains to this day 23 years later. My DH never once called his mom a bitch again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband would beat the shit out of his child if he ever disrespected his mother
I'd beat the shit out of my kids if they talk to DW that way.
Anonymous wrote:My son tried something like this a number of years ago when he was 13 (8th grade September), it went VERY badly for him.
He called my wife a "dumb bitch" and when I confronted him he said that there was"not a fucking things I could do about it". I told him that he has 1 chance to apologize and after that there would be "not a fucking thing that he could do about it". He said that he stood by his statement.
I left the room and the next day he trotted off to school with a big shit eating grin like he got away with something.
The following happened that day:
1) His cell phone service was cancelled
2) Wifi password was changed on wifi
3) His entire room was packed into a uhaul and stored at my warehouse (I'm a small time GC).
4) All clothes except 5 plain T shirts, 5 pairs of underwear, 5 pairs of socks, 2 pairs of shoes remained.
5) Only items left in house room was plain bed (wood one was taken) and sheets and blanket and a desk and chair.
6) NOTHING (posters etc) was left in his room.
Boy wonder was freaked when he returned. I told him that we could talk about it in 30 days.
Never did it again!
Anonymous wrote:My son tried something like this a number of years ago when he was 13 (8th grade September), it went VERY badly for him.
He called my wife a "dumb bitch" and when I confronted him he said that there was"not a fucking things I could do about it". I told him that he has 1 chance to apologize and after that there would be "not a fucking thing that he could do about it". He said that he stood by his statement.
I left the room and the next day he trotted off to school with a big shit eating grin like he got away with something.
The following happened that day:
1) His cell phone service was cancelled
2) Wifi password was changed on wifi
3) His entire room was packed into a uhaul and stored at my warehouse (I'm a small time GC).
4) All clothes except 5 plain T shirts, 5 pairs of underwear, 5 pairs of socks, 2 pairs of shoes remained.
5) Only items left in house room was plain bed (wood one was taken) and sheets and blanket and a desk and chair.
6) NOTHING (posters etc) was left in his room.
Boy wonder was freaked when he returned. I told him that we could talk about it in 30 days.
Never did it again!
Anonymous wrote:My husband would beat the shit out of his child if he ever disrespected his mother
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay kind and loving. "I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you". Ride it out. Make sure you're spending quality time doing something with your kid that the kid enjoys. 13 year old hormones are insane.
I'm a single parent so I get no backup. I tell my kids they have to treat me with respect -- if they don't feel it, they have to fake it. Not at 13 yet but on the verge. Teaching them to be respectful is part of my job as a parent. I would never tolerate that. I may say 'I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you. And you have a right to your feelings, but you are never, ever to say that to me again. would you like it if I told you every time I had a negative feeling about you? We wouldn't be able to function in a family like that, and society can't function with people behaving like that. Nice people don't say things like that." Etc.
If you are putting up with it, then I"m sorry but you are partially responsible. To me this would be very serious.
+1. This is 9:28 and you and I are on the same wavelength.
I'm a single parent too. I have bigger battles to fight. I'm also "lucky" that this only happened when my son was 4-6 (so far) and infrequently at that. My only response was "I love you" while I continued what I was doing. He stopped because it never got him anywhere. And at 4-6 tons of talking didn't work with my son, modeling appropriate behavior did though.
Well in general I have always forced my kids to be respectful. I have never had them say they hated me. Not once. Maybe they don't feel it (my best guess!) but I suspsect it's because I don't allow them to be abusive and disrespectful toward others. I guess we're different, but if my kid shouted he hated me, that would be one of the "bigger battles" in my book.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay kind and loving. "I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you". Ride it out. Make sure you're spending quality time doing something with your kid that the kid enjoys. 13 year old hormones are insane.
I'm a single parent so I get no backup. I tell my kids they have to treat me with respect -- if they don't feel it, they have to fake it. Not at 13 yet but on the verge. Teaching them to be respectful is part of my job as a parent. I would never tolerate that. I may say 'I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you. And you have a right to your feelings, but you are never, ever to say that to me again. would you like it if I told you every time I had a negative feeling about you? We wouldn't be able to function in a family like that, and society can't function with people behaving like that. Nice people don't say things like that." Etc.
If you are putting up with it, then I"m sorry but you are partially responsible. To me this would be very serious.
And then what do you do if you have a kid who says it anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay kind and loving. "I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you". Ride it out. Make sure you're spending quality time doing something with your kid that the kid enjoys. 13 year old hormones are insane.
I'm a single parent so I get no backup. I tell my kids they have to treat me with respect -- if they don't feel it, they have to fake it. Not at 13 yet but on the verge. Teaching them to be respectful is part of my job as a parent. I would never tolerate that. I may say 'I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you. And you have a right to your feelings, but you are never, ever to say that to me again. would you like it if I told you every time I had a negative feeling about you? We wouldn't be able to function in a family like that, and society can't function with people behaving like that. Nice people don't say things like that." Etc.
If you are putting up with it, then I"m sorry but you are partially responsible. To me this would be very serious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay kind and loving. "I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you". Ride it out. Make sure you're spending quality time doing something with your kid that the kid enjoys. 13 year old hormones are insane.
I'm a single parent so I get no backup. I tell my kids they have to treat me with respect -- if they don't feel it, they have to fake it. Not at 13 yet but on the verge. Teaching them to be respectful is part of my job as a parent. I would never tolerate that. I may say 'I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you. And you have a right to your feelings, but you are never, ever to say that to me again. would you like it if I told you every time I had a negative feeling about you? We wouldn't be able to function in a family like that, and society can't function with people behaving like that. Nice people don't say things like that." Etc.
If you are putting up with it, then I"m sorry but you are partially responsible. To me this would be very serious.
+1. This is 9:28 and you and I are on the same wavelength.
I'm a single parent too. I have bigger battles to fight. I'm also "lucky" that this only happened when my son was 4-6 (so far) and infrequently at that. My only response was "I love you" while I continued what I was doing. He stopped because it never got him anywhere. And at 4-6 tons of talking didn't work with my son, modeling appropriate behavior did though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay kind and loving. "I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you". Ride it out. Make sure you're spending quality time doing something with your kid that the kid enjoys. 13 year old hormones are insane.
I'm a single parent so I get no backup. I tell my kids they have to treat me with respect -- if they don't feel it, they have to fake it. Not at 13 yet but on the verge. Teaching them to be respectful is part of my job as a parent. I would never tolerate that. I may say 'I'm sorry you feel that way, I love you. And you have a right to your feelings, but you are never, ever to say that to me again. would you like it if I told you every time I had a negative feeling about you? We wouldn't be able to function in a family like that, and society can't function with people behaving like that. Nice people don't say things like that." Etc.
If you are putting up with it, then I"m sorry but you are partially responsible. To me this would be very serious.
+1. This is 9:28 and you and I are on the same wavelength.