Anonymous wrote:Parents should teach their kids good manners and to care about other people.
Talking to your grandparents a few times a month is polite and a nice thing to do if you are a kid. Even if they don’t particularly like it, it is good for them to learn that sometimes you do something nice for other people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I understand your issues, but you also come across as a bit nutty/controlling with this idea that if your kids talk to their grandparents on *YOUR PHONE* for more than 10 minutes, they're going to become super entitled brats who think it's their phone. Somehow, before the age of cell phones, I was able to talk to my grandparents on the phone and still understand that the phone and landline belonged to my parents.
As the dad of three kids, what I would suggest from experience through 2020 is that you set up some sort of activity for the kids to do over the phone, or even better, FaceTime or Zoom, with the family members. My youngest reads books with Grandpa over Facetime several times a week (Grandpa is filling in where virtual schools aren't). This requires a little bit of pre-planning, in that we buy two copies of the book on Amazon and ship one to each.
They can do games, they can even just watch a show together. I'd also recommend that sometimes it be one on one. But the main idea is that they do some sort of shared experience, and get away from the series of endless question and one-word answers with which they've lately lost interest.
Good luck.
Good ideas!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our kids, all under 10, have liked talking with my family once in a while. They've had nice phone calls and usually, after about 10-15 minutes, I take the smartphone away because i don't want my kids thinking my phone is for them. Same goes for my laptop and Zoom. After many months of this, the kids are starting to lose interest in talking with my sister and parents. They've started handing the phone to me to go play outside or watch a TV show after 5 minutes. I'm not going to force them to sit through the long, question-filled conversation my mom likes to foist on them. My oldest one, who is nine, is already complaining.
I've limited the calls to once every two weeks or so, but they'll still text asking to talk to the kids. I've tried to tell them nicely, the kids are doing school work, playing, running around outside, but my family is now getting indignant. They've always had big issues with boundaries and are now behaving as if they're entitled to long calls with my kids and if my kids don't want to participate in these calls, then I'm a mean person who doesn't enforce how important auntie and grandma are. And again, my kids are not using my phone as they see fit, and i'm not buying them one for this purpose, either. My own grandparents and other relatives were never like this. I don't know where my family gets this behavior from other than they're becoming increasingly entitled as they age. My in-laws don't behave this way. I really need them to pull back on this and they refuse to.
The strangest part of this whole post is the bolded. 🧐
Anonymous wrote:Our kids, all under 10, have liked talking with my family once in a while. They've had nice phone calls and usually, after about 10-15 minutes, I take the smartphone away because i don't want my kids thinking my phone is for them. Same goes for my laptop and Zoom. After many months of this, the kids are starting to lose interest in talking with my sister and parents. They've started handing the phone to me to go play outside or watch a TV show after 5 minutes. I'm not going to force them to sit through the long, question-filled conversation my mom likes to foist on them. My oldest one, who is nine, is already complaining.
I've limited the calls to once every two weeks or so, but they'll still text asking to talk to the kids. I've tried to tell them nicely, the kids are doing school work, playing, running around outside, but my family is now getting indignant. They've always had big issues with boundaries and are now behaving as if they're entitled to long calls with my kids and if my kids don't want to participate in these calls, then I'm a mean person who doesn't enforce how important auntie and grandma are. And again, my kids are not using my phone as they see fit, and i'm not buying them one for this purpose, either. My own grandparents and other relatives were never like this. I don't know where my family gets this behavior from other than they're becoming increasingly entitled as they age. My in-laws don't behave this way. I really need them to pull back on this and they refuse to.
Anonymous wrote:OP I’m all for keeping boundaries but you sound a bit psychotic about your phone. How else are they going to talk?