Anonymous wrote:Crying, screaming, and even hitting are developmentally normal at certain ages so it is hard to tell given the vagueness what is normal/not and what is just a developmental stage/personality/a problem.
Swearing is not, and I would say cursing/swearing reveals something more about your friends than anything else. Plenty of people can come off as put together or normal parents but might go home and be completely out of control — cursing at their kids, berating them, and otherwise being emotionally or physically abused.
Their “good” kids don’t tell you anything — I was a “good” kid to emotionally immature parents because I knew making a “mistake” (being a normal child) would end in abuse for me. My parents were always complimented on being excellent parents and came off as normal but they were terrible at home. My older brother — with severe behavioral issues, who drinks, swears, has issues with domestic violence, really tells the truth of what was going on in my house.
Modeling is the answer here. Smack your kid and yell/berate/curse at them? You’ve just normalized that for the rest of their lives
Anonymous wrote:It’s always the third child. Have pity on us
Anonymous wrote:IME a lot of those kids are the nicest by MS and Hs. They often have adhd or anxiety making them act out and once that is recognized and managed by caring parents they turn into compassionate nice kids.
OTOH, some of the nicest preschoolers turn into terrors in MS or HS because those are the kids that are put an high priority on acting in compliance with expectations. When they are little, those are adult expectations so they are nicely behaved, but when they are teens, that is teen expectations so they can become very into policing what /who is cool or popular and can be very susceptible to peer pressure but good at hiding that from adults. Not all of them but I have definitely seen that happen with some of the kids I was most impressed by in preschool and K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gentle parenting is a joke. Ineffective.
This. I know a few very nice parents who simply don't ever tell their kids "no" and as a result the kids are terrors.
Anonymous wrote:We have all these super nice adults who have kids who are absolute terrors. Not all their kids are bad some one or two of their kids are out of control.
Is this bad parenting?
One girl is so bad hitting and cursing at parents, other kids and her siblings. DH and I were shocked watching the girl’s behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Could be special needs -- some kids really are harder than others. People with easy kids never believe this but people with tough kids know it whether their kids are well behaved or not.
Also there's a difference between being a nice person generally and being a good parent. Parenting requires self-control, patience, love/affection towards your kids, problem solving... but I don't know that being nice is an asset. It could actually be a problem if the niceness takes the form of people-pleasing. If you people please your kids, they won't learn to behave. You have to be able to set limits and you need to be comfortable with your kids being upset with you without taking it personally. That's different than just being nice -- it's an internal strength of character that might be harder to recognize as an outsider.