Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have food or drink (whatever it is) and your family or guests are there, you should offer to share. This is why I often save my treats to eat after they are asleep. I would just skip SB if my kids are present but I don’t want to buy for them.
Coffee isn’t a treat. It’s for adults like alcohol. I made it abundant clear since my kids were toddlers: no caffeinated drinks until you’re done growing. That’s how I grew up and I don’t see any problem with it. So no, I’m not buying you any sugary garbage just because I’m getting my coffee.
If I'm driving alcohol in front of my kids like a restaurant or winery, they do get to order a nonalcoholic drink, not just drink the free water.
Oops that was supposed to be "drinking alcohol" not driving, ha.
But also wanted to add that the PP is very odd for saying alcohol isn't a treat. Of course it is, for adults. Unless you're an alcoholic.
I don’t believe in the concept of “treats” for adults. I earn my money, I use it in any way I see fit. So no, I don’t think coffee or alcohol is a treat. It’s not something that someone else is bestowing on me for good behavior or a special occasion.
HAHA, ok - then what word would you use for something that you do not need - only want - and get for yourself? Honestly, you're just being an a-hole at this point in time pretending you don't understand the term treat. It means, alcohol and coffee are not needed to live. It's something extra that you provide yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. If we're en route to school or an early morning swim meet and I do a Starbucks mobile order for a giant plain coffee, I do not also get something for my elementary schooler, unless that was the plan for her breakfast. I promise you she does not care. If I were going at a random time of day for something "fun" with her in my company, it would again be part of a plan ("let's get a treat - want something from Starbucks?").
I don't happen to drink coffee. But I can't really fathom why, if you're leaving directly from your house to go somewhere, you wouldn't just take a coffee with you. It's faster, cheaper, better for the environment.
I can get that sometimes when you've been out from hours, or when your day has been stretched by things you didn't anticipate, it's nice to stop, maybe sit down for a minute, use a bathroom, buy a treat. But in that case, my kid deserves to stop, and sit down, use a bathroom, and buy a treat.
But Starbucks in the morning every day, that isn't something I can't understand modeling for my kids.
But maybe I am missing something and Starbucks black drip coffee tastes way better than homemade or something?
It doesn’t. I also don’t understand people who get daily drip from Starbucks. It’s not good coffee, so I assume they have really basic taste buds.
Anonymous wrote:Ouch. You treat yourself but not your kids because you do not want to spend that much? Then don’t get yourself one. Pretty sad to be honest with you.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I only get drip or unsweetened iced coffees with milk. I’m happy to order my kids those…but they are disinterested. They prefer $6 iced matchas with oat milk and so forth.
So no, I don’t order them a drink every time I get a coffee.
And they’re ok! Your kids will be ok too! It’s rather alarming to see so many parents willing to buy their children awful beverages just so they don’t feel “sad.”
When I worked in the office full time, I made and drank coffee at home, brought some with me, but inevitably bought some Starbucks in the afternoon. But I am basically made of caffeine and drink coffee at all hours of the day.
If I were having one cup of coffee per day, it would not come from Starbucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. If we're en route to school or an early morning swim meet and I do a Starbucks mobile order for a giant plain coffee, I do not also get something for my elementary schooler, unless that was the plan for her breakfast. I promise you she does not care. If I were going at a random time of day for something "fun" with her in my company, it would again be part of a plan ("let's get a treat - want something from Starbucks?").
I don't happen to drink coffee. But I can't really fathom why, if you're leaving directly from your house to go somewhere, you wouldn't just take a coffee with you. It's faster, cheaper, better for the environment.
I can get that sometimes when you've been out from hours, or when your day has been stretched by things you didn't anticipate, it's nice to stop, maybe sit down for a minute, use a bathroom, buy a treat. But in that case, my kid deserves to stop, and sit down, use a bathroom, and buy a treat.
But Starbucks in the morning every day, that isn't something I can't understand modeling for my kids.
But maybe I am missing something and Starbucks black drip coffee tastes way better than homemade or something?
Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. If we're en route to school or an early morning swim meet and I do a Starbucks mobile order for a giant plain coffee, I do not also get something for my elementary schooler, unless that was the plan for her breakfast. I promise you she does not care. If I were going at a random time of day for something "fun" with her in my company, it would again be part of a plan ("let's get a treat - want something from Starbucks?").
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. If we're en route to school or an early morning swim meet and I do a Starbucks mobile order for a giant plain coffee, I do not also get something for my elementary schooler, unless that was the plan for her breakfast. I promise you she does not care. If I were going at a random time of day for something "fun" with her in my company, it would again be part of a plan ("let's get a treat - want something from Starbucks?").
I don't think the folks here are talking about infants or whatever age your little kid is. This is about teens. How weird to post on a thread about teenager when your kid is in 1st grade.