Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard to imagine being more petty, OP. I would talk to her about it. 7 is still very impulsive.
+1
She's 7. Kids don't learn things instantly. You have to reenforce social rules over and over as they grow up.
One of my kids loves finding out what he's getting and blurting it out. Totally ruins the joy of the surprise -- FOR ME, not him.
Why don't you tell your DD why you thought she would enjoy it? If she changes her mind and likes it, will that be enough for you or do you want your own feelings soothed?
+2
You set her up for failure. That's on you.
FWIW, even adults have problems regulating emotions, not using filters, and are impolite.
You might want to think about if your DD learned it from you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
She posted on the general parenting forum, not the preschool forum. She could’ve been age specific, but she isn’t wrong to list this as a general parenting question.
The vast majority of topics skew towards 5 and under.
So? That doesn’t mean it’s only for 5 and under. On the forum heading page, right under general parenting is a link to the actual 5 and under board.
OP wasn’t wrong to post here instead of the elementary school age kids board, but I think she’s wrong to take away the gift or make a big deal of the kid hurting her feelings. 7yo kids aren’t known for tact, and it’s the parent’s job to teach them, patiently, not be melodramatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard to imagine being more petty, OP. I would talk to her about it. 7 is still very impulsive.
+1
She's 7. Kids don't learn things instantly. You have to reenforce social rules over and over as they grow up.
One of my kids loves finding out what he's getting and blurting it out. Totally ruins the joy of the surprise -- FOR ME, not him.
Why don't you tell your DD why you thought she would enjoy it? If she changes her mind and likes it, will that be enough for you or do you want your own feelings soothed?
Anonymous wrote:Long story short: I got a small gift for my 7yo child for a minor milestone event. She saw me open the amazon box (knowing it contained her gift) and she said “that looks boring” before she realized the other side looked much more interesting. She has a history of blurting out rude things like that and I’m losing patience for it. Debating if I should return the gift or not. What would you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
She posted on the general parenting forum, not the preschool forum. She could’ve been age specific, but she isn’t wrong to list this as a general parenting question.
The vast majority of topics skew towards 5 and under.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
How old are your kids? Do they not have any bad habits? They’re perfect? I know 37 year olds who blurt things out rudely, why should a 7 year old be expected to have perfect manners?
Returning the gift is lazy parenting imo.
Anonymous wrote:Giving consequences without intentionally teaching her the skills to regulate her outbursts is like trying to sit on a two-legged stool. It doesn’t work. You think the consequence will “teach” her, but it doesn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
She posted on the general parenting forum, not the preschool forum. She could’ve been age specific, but she isn’t wrong to list this as a general parenting question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
She posted on the general parenting forum, not the preschool forum. She could’ve been age specific, but she isn’t wrong to list this as a general parenting question.
Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
Anonymous wrote:I think you have to stop infantalizing her. She is 7 a nd you post a question in the preschool forum instead of elementary school age kids
.
What I would do now would depend on what I had done before?
You say her rudness is habitual, so what have you previously done to correct it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't even register to me. Your child felt she could express her honest feelings to her mother. In the privacy of her own home. If she can't be honest in that environment where the hell CAN she be honest?
It only would have been rude if she'd said it to the gift-giver.
OP is the gift giver.
I'll still stick with my bolded statement. Because I think that is most important. Later, after the moment has passed I might say to the child "Hey the moment when you're receiving a gift is not the time to say anything negative. It's the time to say I'm so excited or thank you so much but tell me, as your parent, later, that you don't think it'll hold your attention. That's a more gentle way of saying something looks boring." But I definitely wouldn't send the gift back or punish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't even register to me. Your child felt she could express her honest feelings to her mother. In the privacy of her own home. If she can't be honest in that environment where the hell CAN she be honest?
It only would have been rude if she'd said it to the gift-giver.
OP is the gift giver.