Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay recent PPs, despite the details (whether she was sticking legs out or not, whether op saw everything or not...) do you think bat the BIL acted appropriately? Screaming at the DH and everything?
Really on a scale of 1-10 the kids misbehavior was a 2 at worst and all he needed to do was ask her to get down, if she didn't comply. ask the parents for assistance.
His reactions was a 7 so an overreaction.
But OP's reaction should have been more like he dude lighten up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing happened to me but I did not run out of the room or pack up.
My brother disciplined my child for standing on something he should not stand on but his way of handling it was heavy handed and my son screamed bloody murder. I didn't move and I let it go on for a little until he turned to me and said "r u going to do something" I asked " you want me to clean up your mess?"
In the meantime, I pulled up a picture of his younger child standing on the counter getting a snack, it was on FB and it said! little man helping himself... So cute.
It's cute when it is yours right, I said as I showed him the picture
My SIL who is awesome said, "got you on that one."
Whatever, kids are not perfect, they climb on shit.
My roommate from college was visiting and her son stood on my coffee table, I knew what he was doing it, like hey look we are in front of a stranger what ya going to do. So I quietly told her, I know you are sweating this one, I am going to pretend to get something from the kitchen, he will be less brave with me gone.that is how you handle it.
Never judge... Provide support.
I like you. will you be my friend?
Wait, with a level head like this you probably don't live in the DC area do you?
Anonymous wrote:Okay recent PPs, despite the details (whether she was sticking legs out or not, whether op saw everything or not...) do you think bat the BIL acted appropriately? Screaming at the DH and everything?
Anonymous wrote:Same thing happened to me but I did not run out of the room or pack up.
My brother disciplined my child for standing on something he should not stand on but his way of handling it was heavy handed and my son screamed bloody murder. I didn't move and I let it go on for a little until he turned to me and said "r u going to do something" I asked " you want me to clean up your mess?"
In the meantime, I pulled up a picture of his younger child standing on the counter getting a snack, it was on FB and it said! little man helping himself... So cute.
It's cute when it is yours right, I said as I showed him the picture
My SIL who is awesome said, "got you on that one."
Whatever, kids are not perfect, they climb on shit.
My roommate from college was visiting and her son stood on my coffee table, I knew what he was doing it, like hey look we are in front of a stranger what ya going to do. So I quietly told her, I know you are sweating this one, I am going to pretend to get something from the kitchen, he will be less brave with me gone.that is how you handle it.
Never judge... Provide support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just sharing: I was beaten and screamed at as a child growing up and have deep emotional scars from it. I don't care if it's family - NOBODY touches my child in an aggressive manner. Use words.
Grabbing a child to remove them from a dangerous situation is so totally different than abuse. I'm sorry you were abused, but this is not the same situation at all. FWIW, I was abused and screamed at as a child, too (and well into my teens), but I can see the difference between abuse and this situation.
No I'm not saying that this was abuse at all, but if an adult is so angry that he's yelling at someone's face, then he needs to step away and calm down first to get a control over emotions - otherwise a light grabbing in anger can be very painful to a small child.
Anonymous wrote:I am seriously amazed by the holier than thou posters who claim a 0 tolerance policy for kids on couches. That is nuts. My kids are allowed on the furniture and I'm not stupid enough to think that makes them rude and undisciplined.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here again. To clarify about the leg-grabbing--I don't think that he removed her from the couch--I think she got herself down onto the seat part when she saw him moving toward her. She scrambled down, and he grabbed at her as she was scrambling down. By the time I turned around, she was on the seat part face-up with her legs facing him, and he was leaning over the arm rest trying to grab at her legs.
OP, how do you know how it all went down if you had your back to them? You are making assumptions based on your bias.
It sounds as if she was maybe trying to kick him or scramble back up to the arm rest and that is why he grabbed her legs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just sharing: I was beaten and screamed at as a child growing up and have deep emotional scars from it. I don't care if it's family - NOBODY touches my child in an aggressive manner. Use words.
Grabbing a child to remove them from a dangerous situation is so totally different than abuse. I'm sorry you were abused, but this is not the same situation at all. FWIW, I was abused and screamed at as a child, too (and well into my teens), but I can see the difference between abuse and this situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here again. To clarify about the leg-grabbing--I don't think that he removed her from the couch--I think she got herself down onto the seat part when she saw him moving toward her. She scrambled down, and he grabbed at her as she was scrambling down. By the time I turned around, she was on the seat part face-up with her legs facing him, and he was leaning over the arm rest trying to grab at her legs.
OP, how do you know how it all went down if you had your back to them? You are making assumptions based on your bias.
It sounds as if she was maybe trying to kick him or scramble back up to the arm rest and that is why he grabbed her legs.
Anonymous wrote:I am a very relaxed parent. You have to be with a bunch of boys or you will be yelling all the time.
OP, you were way out of line. You over reacted. You escalated the situation. Your child's behavior was out of control. If that infraction resulted in BIL yelling then I am sure there was a lot of wildness by your kids prior to that point that really tried his patience.
I am guessing if he posted here his side would be very different than what you posted, particularly with regards to her getting off the couch arm. I am sure she did not compliantly step down when asked, and the grabbing for her legs leads me to believe there was likely some defiant response from her coupled with her launching herself or running across his couch on the way down.
My kids would have gotten scolded by me after that exchange and then made to help clean or something similar as an apology for being rude to someone else's house.
Anonymous wrote:If you've got a sofa that you don't want kids feet on then don't have kids, invite people over with kids, or have a kid's birthday party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume that everyone here responding would insist that their children use their words when confronting a peer, so why is it that so many of you are just fine with the BIL angrily grabbing at a four year old girl's legs to the point that she is in tears? He didn't say, "please don't stand on the couch" or "get off the couch" or even "get off the damn couch." He said "No, no!" and then grabbed her. Do all your kids hop to attention the instant you say "no!" and do exactly what you're asking them to read your mind about? Or are they lost in their own thoughts doing their own thing and it takes them a second to process? I'm guessing the latter. That's normal four YO behavior. Even when doing something that upon reflection they should know not to do.
If he had unemotionally picked her up and set her down, that's no problem. But getting worked up about a four year old on the arm of your sofa and then grabbing at her when she's clearly scared of you and trying to get away is completely unacceptable.
The fact that he CAME AND APOLOGIZED should tell everyone what they need to know about this interaction. He was clearly in the wrong or he wouldn't have done so.
This man is clearly not in control of his temper. I feel sorry for his kids.
I would bet he apologized because they were packing up to leave. Drama all around.
If you read the OP it sounds like he didn't even know they were packing up. Just that they had retreated to the guest room because he had reduced two children to tears and screamed in his BIL's face.
OP here. That's right; he came right up to the room a few moments later and apologized. So it wasn't at my SIL's prompting (she wasn't home). And no, he didn't know we were packing; just that we had gone to the room. And we really weren't packing--I shouldn't have said that earlier. We were just discussing packing up and leaving. Although packing up would have meant just putting the bags in the car, because basically everything was still in the bags.
Anyway, I guess I did come here because I was hoping for support, for validation that what my BIL did was wrong. I get it that many of you don't seem to agree.
OP, I'm sorry. These people are nuts. I posted a minute ago about my father and I totally understand how this whole incident could have gone down. This post has zero to do with whether she was doing something she shouldn't because it really doesn't even have that much to do with the fact that he tried discipline your kid. Correcting someone else's child who is misbehaving in your home is fine. Your BIL just has a temper and he lashed out in a totally inappropriate way. But his apology indicates that he knows it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also don't necessarily think that the apology means that BIL was so out of line. I have apologized to my SIL before when she has really not deserved it, and I was not really sorry and did nothing wrong in my view. However, she is nothing but drama and I did it so that my MIL would not be upset because the family is fighting. MIL knew I didn't do anything wrong either but was grateful I kept the peace.
It's possible BIL apologized because he didn't want his wife to come home to her family gone and God knows what kind of rift left behind.
it still points back to BIL's temper being a known quantity in the family. Even if you are right with this, it means he didn't want to have to answer the question "where did they go? what happened?" with "well, her kid was on the armrest and wouldn't come down, and I..." He had just raised his voice at two ADULTS about their child and his authority. Is that sort of behavior really normal for so many of you?