Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see teens/adults on social media and in social settings say things like "My mom is the best, my #1, etc". My own mom was terrible, how do I become the best mom in the world to my kids?
I think it will be different for each child honestly. For example, my brothers felt very strongly about my parents attending their sporting events. For whatever reason, it was important to them and made them feel loved to see my parents show up. For me, it was just having someone who could listen to me without interrupting. I also think remaining relatable is an important part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spend time with them and meet their needs. However, many may just be saying it to make their parents happy and their parents may be terrible people.
This. My SIL also puts this up about her mom (granted, she's much older) and it's SUCH bullsh*t. They are at each other's throats a lot of the time. I know they love each other, but they certainly do not LIKE each other. At all.
Anonymous wrote:As someone whose mom is a mess and I’ve been the “parent” for much of my life, I feel this. I have never been able to post the “don’t know what I’d do without her, she’s the best!” crap on Mother’s Day. The reality is without me she would be screwed, not the other way around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:...don't most people feel this way about their moms? Like I know my mom isn't objectively the World's Greatest Mom-- even though I got her that mug!!-- but she is amazing to me, and I wouldn't want any other mom, YKWIM?
I know "most people" is not nearly all, but I think especially when we're kids-- yes, even teens-- we do tend to feel this way. At least enough to express that sentiment on social media, in a card, etc.
Even when I was p!ssed at her as a teen, I thought she was the worst mom in the world except for all the other moms-- i.e., the best.
No, I don't think most people feel this way. I don't know the percentages, but I think many people are not great parents...and especially by the time kids are teens they are well aware of that. My situation is a little different, since my parents' failures were undeniable: sister and I both had eating disorders, sister tried to kill herself, parents were yelling at me or siblings all the time to the point friends said they didn't like coming over. So I think it'd be worrying if a teenager couldn't figure out something was off. But I don't think it's strange for teenagers to assess poor parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:...don't most people feel this way about their moms? Like I know my mom isn't objectively the World's Greatest Mom-- even though I got her that mug!!-- but she is amazing to me, and I wouldn't want any other mom, YKWIM?
I know "most people" is not nearly all, but I think especially when we're kids-- yes, even teens-- we do tend to feel this way. At least enough to express that sentiment on social media, in a card, etc.
Even when I was p!ssed at her as a teen, I thought she was the worst mom in the world except for all the other moms-- i.e., the best.
No, I don't think most people feel this way. I don't know the percentages, but I think many people are not great parents...and especially by the time kids are teens they are well aware of that. My situation is a little different, since my parents' failures were undeniable: sister and I both had eating disorders, sister tried to kill herself, parents were yelling at me or siblings all the time to the point friends said they didn't like coming over. So I think it'd be worrying if a teenager couldn't figure out something was off. But I don't think it's strange for teenagers to assess poor parenting.
Anonymous wrote:My student came home today and said I was the only parent in class who donated snacks for a class event. The teacher had asked for snacks for today. I sent 100 of them, so she has leftovers.
I would never tell any parent I did this -- I'm not one to brag online, in fact I do not use Facebook -- but my kid sure noticed. I said to my child: "Well, I'm glad your teacher got the snacks and could use them."
Let your actions send the message.