Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What gives his aunt the right to grab and force herself on him for hugs? It's creepy.
Oh, give me a break. Seriously. You act like she's a freaking child predator. How about you get a grip and he be respectful and kind to his aunt and give her ONE STUPID HUG. Instead of being a little jerk!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What gives his aunt the right to grab and force herself on him for hugs? It's creepy.
Oh, give me a break. Seriously. You act like she's a freaking child predator. How about you get a grip and he be respectful and kind to his aunt and give her ONE STUPID HUG. Instead of being a little jerk!
Did you not read the post?
He gave her a hug - then she wanted another, and another, etc. Goodbye is not supposed to be an hour long ordeal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What gives his aunt the right to grab and force herself on him for hugs? It's creepy.
Oh, give me a break. Seriously. You act like she's a freaking child predator. How about you get a grip and he be respectful and kind to his aunt and give her ONE STUPID HUG. Instead of being a little jerk!
Anonymous wrote:What gives his aunt the right to grab and force herself on him for hugs? It's creepy.
Anonymous wrote:OP here... maybe I could've handled it better but when my son started saying no and trying to get away from her and her grabbing at him it made me react. I was so upset. I just felt like she doesn't respect my child and his space. He tells me he doesn't want her to come over and I wonder if this is why. He will always give her a hug goodbye but it's after he does it once he doesn't want to do it 100 times. I don't like seeing children forced to hug and kiss people they don't want to. There is something creepy about it.
Anonymous wrote:I think you could have handled it in a less harsh manner. "Ok, you don't feel like hugs. Can you give Aunt a high five or blow a kiss?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're relatives. It's a HUG. Seriously, get over it. Yes, your child is rude. Enough with the boundaries nonsense, when you try to make EVERY SINGLE STUPID THING about "boundaries" it loses its importance and effectiveness. Find some other reason to stir the pot with your in-laws because this is silly.
I feel sorry for your kid.
I feel sorry for the relatives who raised OP's husband with love and want to be affectionate, in an innocent and totally normal way, to their grandchild/niece/nephew, only to be cold shouldered, rebuffed, told they are wrong for doing that and made to feel weird.
I also feel sorry for you. It seems like you've been raised to believe that love means you give up all bodily autonomy and agency. Scarred little kids are forced to hug grandparents and a little boy will be forced to hug his aunt until he cries. In my house, my kids feel safe and respected. They show affection when they feel it - not when they're bullied into it. I'm sorry the bullying kind of affection is all you've known.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're relatives. It's a HUG. Seriously, get over it. Yes, your child is rude. Enough with the boundaries nonsense, when you try to make EVERY SINGLE STUPID THING about "boundaries" it loses its importance and effectiveness. Find some other reason to stir the pot with your in-laws because this is silly.
I feel sorry for your kid.
I feel sorry for the relatives who raised OP's husband with love and want to be affectionate, in an innocent and totally normal way, to their grandchild/niece/nephew, only to be cold shouldered, rebuffed, told they are wrong for doing that and made to feel weird.