Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP: I would be proud if he was a nurse.
Good grief, set your sights for him higher.
Quit thinking about how to stomp on his self-esteem just because your ego is bruised.
LOL omg, imagine if I said, no I would be upset if he was a nurse. People would bash me. I can't win.
You would be upset if your kid becomes a nurse. You know he is capable of more than that, and you should encourage him to set his sights higher than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP: I would be proud if he was a nurse.
Good grief, set your sights for him higher.
Quit thinking about how to stomp on his self-esteem just because your ego is bruised.
LOL omg, imagine if I said, no I would be upset if he was a nurse. People would bash me. I can't win.
Then his grades are probably fine. He can go to a state school, get into a nursing program that is fine and become a nurse.
What is the issue? Does he gets all F's, or did he get a B in a class that he could have gotten an A.
You have to realize that you are sending a message to your child that is making him angry and he is responding with ... drum roll please.. anger.
It is not okay that he is disrespectful, but you need to figure out how you are contributing to this.
There are tons of books on teens... how to talk so teens will listen, the 5 love languages of teens, etc.
You are pushing him away when you need to build an adult relationship with him. He is pulling away because he will be an adult soon and he needs to make his own decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take away anything your salary pays for. Snacks out with friends after school? Gone. Money for shopping? Gone. Cool new sneakers? Gone. New baseball hat? Gone.
Also, Dad needs to shut your son down when he talks like this. Both because it's disrespectful to his wife, and because it's unacceptable for your son to talk to his mother that way.
I was wondering how this was possibly going to be the dad's fault in some way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Some of you are a joke. My kids listened to everything when the were little. Wait until they are 16. God, you sound stupid.
I totally agree. Our kids were raised with defined limits, appropriate and consistent discipline, etc. Once they hit puberty, things changed. They were annoying as fuck but all 'normal'. The rigidity on this thread is more frightening than some minor teen attitude.
Yes, but if your teen said you he was smarter than you, that you were lazy, would you just say, "oh, it's normal teen angst" and shrug it off? IMO, this isn't minor teen attitude. The "I hate you, you're the worst parent in the world" statement, I get, but some of what OP's teen has stated doesn't seem like the "normal" teen attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Some of you are a joke. My kids listened to everything when the were little. Wait until they are 16. God, you sound stupid.
I totally agree. Our kids were raised with defined limits, appropriate and consistent discipline, etc. Once they hit puberty, things changed. They were annoying as fuck but all 'normal'. The rigidity on this thread is more frightening than some minor teen attitude.
Yes, but if your teen said you he was smarter than you, that you were lazy, would you just say, "oh, it's normal teen angst" and shrug it off? IMO, this isn't minor teen attitude. The "I hate you, you're the worst parent in the world" statement, I get, but some of what OP's teen has stated doesn't seem like the "normal" teen attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Take away anything your salary pays for. Snacks out with friends after school? Gone. Money for shopping? Gone. Cool new sneakers? Gone. New baseball hat? Gone.
Also, Dad needs to shut your son down when he talks like this. Both because it's disrespectful to his wife, and because it's unacceptable for your son to talk to his mother that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP: I would be proud if he was a nurse.
Good grief, set your sights for him higher.
Quit thinking about how to stomp on his self-esteem just because your ego is bruised.
LOL omg, imagine if I said, no I would be upset if he was a nurse. People would bash me. I can't win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Some of you are a joke. My kids listened to everything when the were little. Wait until they are 16. God, you sound stupid.
I totally agree. Our kids were raised with defined limits, appropriate and consistent discipline, etc. Once they hit puberty, things changed. They were annoying as fuck but all 'normal'. The rigidity on this thread is more frightening than some minor teen attitude.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. Some of you are a joke. My kids listened to everything when the were little. Wait until they are 16. God, you sound stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Why Is OP getting flack for using the word "gifted"?
Did anyone read the other thread about making students gifted? Everyone is using that work, but OP is bashed for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP: I would be proud if he was a nurse.
Good grief, set your sights for him higher.
Quit thinking about how to stomp on his self-esteem just because your ego is bruised.
LOL omg, imagine if I said, no I would be upset if he was a nurse. People would bash me. I can't win.
You would be upset if your kid becomes a nurse. You know he is capable of more than that, and you should encourage him to set his sights higher than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP: I would be proud if he was a nurse.
Good grief, set your sights for him higher.
Quit thinking about how to stomp on his self-esteem just because your ego is bruised.
LOL omg, imagine if I said, no I would be upset if he was a nurse. People would bash me. I can't win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP: I would be proud if he was a nurse.
Good grief, set your sights for him higher.
Quit thinking about how to stomp on his self-esteem just because your ego is bruised.