Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I say "oh, no...don't worry about it" when you tell him to clean it up before you go it's not because I'm being polite. It's because I want your child out of my home as quickly as possible. And no, you don't get to "teach him" to clean up messes he makes this way. Teach him to not trash other peoples playrooms in the first place.
So instead of telling the child and the mother this, where it might have had some effect, you post about it on DCUM? Why?
Really? You don't get that people come on here to vent? You don't get that lecturing the mom at that moment probably would be a waste of time and kinda weird? If the mom of the messy kid has any social ability whatsoever, she would apologize when the mess was discovered, offer to help clean up, defer politely if the OP says no, leave, and then write an apology later. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I say "oh, no...don't worry about it" when you tell him to clean it up before you go it's not because I'm being polite. It's because I want your child out of my home as quickly as possible. And no, you don't get to "teach him" to clean up messes he makes this way. Teach him to not trash other peoples playrooms in the first place.
So instead of telling the child and the mother this, where it might have had some effect, you post about it on DCUM? Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP has playroom?
NP--that's what we call the room in our basement (in our DC rowhouse). What's the issue?
As the mother of a 9 year old, that's totally unacceptable. No 9 year old should be trashing someone's space let alone their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define "trashed." You don't get to have a hissy fit without defining it.
The fact is, I have a playroom and, with the 8-9 year old set, my playroom is quite a mess when they leave. Group mentality or just excitement of all being together. They know better in their own homes. I'm quite able to cope without getting my panties in a twist.
I think OP needs to chill.
But you, of course, "get to" tell other people when they can and cannot have a "hissy fit." Sounds to me like someone has a poorly behaved older kid who trashes things.
You're not helping your case, OP. You sound unstable.
Anonymous wrote:I find your dynamic very, very odd.
You throw a fit because toys are on the floor of the playroom.
You'd rather play the martyr than have the offender take responsibility, own his offense, and clean it up.
Your own child is in tears because he knows what is coming from you -- very, very telling.
You sound like a nightmare, OP. Playrooms get dirty. Toys get taken out. It's not "trashing the playroom." It's having a good time. Set a time limit on fun next time. And get an idea about why you would rather be passive aggressive than actually get what you want -- the kids cleaning up. Your martyr act is way, way, old. Like 1960's old.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it, OP. If your problem is that the kid made a mess, then having him clean it up would solve your entire problem so why are you martyring yourself and being judgmental about this family? Just let him clean it up and move on with your life. If you end your child's friendships because of shit like this, it's going to be a lonely road for your kid.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it, OP. If your problem is that the kid made a mess, then having him clean it up would solve your entire problem so why are you martyring yourself and being judgmental about this family? Just let him clean it up and move on with your life. If you end your child's friendships because of shit like this, it's going to be a lonely road for your kid.
Anonymous wrote:And I say "oh, no...don't worry about it" when you tell him to clean it up before you go it's not because I'm being polite. It's because I want your child out of my home as quickly as possible. And no, you don't get to "teach him" to clean up messes he makes this way. Teach him to not trash other peoples playrooms in the first place.