Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are weirdly and inappropriately demonizing a ten-year-old child.
Not demonizing just identifying that the relationship is hurtful to DS. Another example- they have a three row vehicle and DS is obsessed with the idea of riding in the back row. It’s all he talks about. I always tell him know bc it’s hard for me to get back there and the buckle for one seat belt sits really low and is hard to do. Nephew knows DS wants to sit back there so nephew goes back there and sits in the “easy” to buckle seat. We can’t get the tricky one to click so I tell DS he has to come back to the middle row. DS is so sad about it that he starts crying, meanwhile nephew sits in the third row contentedly while SIL says nothing.
This sounds like a you problem OP. Go out to vehicle we’ll before you need to leave and pull the buckle out more. Or don’t even let DS start back in the last row so he’s not crying. The kids ages are too far apart for them to get along right now, especially if the cousin is more mature for his age and your DS is less mature for his age.
Most kids have "assigned" or preferred seats in their cars. If that's where he normally sits, he may not know or think about. This is a child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell nephew that someone who's TRULY mature and smart, would NEVER try to make someone else feel little or stupid. Ask how he'd feel if each time he went to do something you showed him up since you're faster, smarter, taller, etc. than him.
I mean, OP is kind of an unreliable narrator here. She's attributing a lot of stuff to spite that might just be the age difference. It's normal for a parent to feel protective of her child, but I'm sensing that we'd get a VERY different story from the other child's parents.
This may just be a case where both kids are fine, and acting in an age appropriate manner, but they are not well suited as playmates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell nephew that someone who's TRULY mature and smart, would NEVER try to make someone else feel little or stupid. Ask how he'd feel if each time he went to do something you showed him up since you're faster, smarter, taller, etc. than him.
The nephew is 9, this is ridiculous advice.
Agree, this is a child who is older. He sounds age appropriate. OP sounds like a bully and very domineering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are weirdly and inappropriately demonizing a ten-year-old child.
Not demonizing just identifying that the relationship is hurtful to DS. Another example- they have a three row vehicle and DS is obsessed with the idea of riding in the back row. It’s all he talks about. I always tell him know bc it’s hard for me to get back there and the buckle for one seat belt sits really low and is hard to do. Nephew knows DS wants to sit back there so nephew goes back there and sits in the “easy” to buckle seat. We can’t get the tricky one to click so I tell DS he has to come back to the middle row. DS is so sad about it that he starts crying, meanwhile nephew sits in the third row contentedly while SIL says nothing.
This sounds like a you problem OP. Go out to vehicle we’ll before you need to leave and pull the buckle out more. Or don’t even let DS start back in the last row so he’s not crying. The kids ages are too far apart for them to get along right now, especially if the cousin is more mature for his age and your DS is less mature for his age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell nephew that someone who's TRULY mature and smart, would NEVER try to make someone else feel little or stupid. Ask how he'd feel if each time he went to do something you showed him up since you're faster, smarter, taller, etc. than him.
The nephew is 9, this is ridiculous advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to force the cousin to play with your son. That’s too big of an age gap and the nephew isn’t interested. Entertain your own kid.
I explained bug kids sometimes don’t like to play with younger kids. He’s fine with that. He’s resourceful and actually calls his same-age cousin from DH’s side of the family and they play online together. It’s the purposeful rejection that hurts DS, like they will both be in the cousin’s room on their own devices and nephew will pull out headphones to avoid interaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are weirdly and inappropriately demonizing a ten-year-old child.
Not demonizing just identifying that the relationship is hurtful to DS. Another example- they have a three row vehicle and DS is obsessed with the idea of riding in the back row. It’s all he talks about. I always tell him know bc it’s hard for me to get back there and the buckle for one seat belt sits really low and is hard to do. Nephew knows DS wants to sit back there so nephew goes back there and sits in the “easy” to buckle seat. We can’t get the tricky one to click so I tell DS he has to come back to the middle row. DS is so sad about it that he starts crying, meanwhile nephew sits in the third row contentedly while SIL says nothing.
Sorry OP, but you sound like you are raising a brat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are weirdly and inappropriately demonizing a ten-year-old child.
Not demonizing just identifying that the relationship is hurtful to DS. Another example- they have a three row vehicle and DS is obsessed with the idea of riding in the back row. It’s all he talks about. I always tell him know bc it’s hard for me to get back there and the buckle for one seat belt sits really low and is hard to do. Nephew knows DS wants to sit back there so nephew goes back there and sits in the “easy” to buckle seat. We can’t get the tricky one to click so I tell DS he has to come back to the middle row. DS is so sad about it that he starts crying, meanwhile nephew sits in the third row contentedly while SIL says nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Tell nephew that someone who's TRULY mature and smart, would NEVER try to make someone else feel little or stupid. Ask how he'd feel if each time he went to do something you showed him up since you're faster, smarter, taller, etc. than him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are weirdly and inappropriately demonizing a ten-year-old child.
Not demonizing just identifying that the relationship is hurtful to DS. Another example- they have a three row vehicle and DS is obsessed with the idea of riding in the back row. It’s all he talks about. I always tell him know bc it’s hard for me to get back there and the buckle for one seat belt sits really low and is hard to do. Nephew knows DS wants to sit back there so nephew goes back there and sits in the “easy” to buckle seat. We can’t get the tricky one to click so I tell DS he has to come back to the middle row. DS is so sad about it that he starts crying, meanwhile nephew sits in the third row contentedly while SIL says nothing.