Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
That came out of left field. The PP wasn't being mean, OP, there's no need to be mean yourself.
Oh c'mon. The PP was being insufferably sanctimonious. We lived in Africa! My DS was super active and I was super proud! Thank god my kid never had to meet a nanny! Ugh.
I didn't read it that way. I think you are a little overly sensitive.
I think it would be hard to read the bit about the nanny any other way...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
That came out of left field. The PP wasn't being mean, OP, there's no need to be mean yourself.
Oh c'mon. The PP was being insufferably sanctimonious. We lived in Africa! My DS was super active and I was super proud! Thank god my kid never had to meet a nanny! Ugh.
I didn't read it that way. I think you are a little overly sensitive.
I think it would be hard to read the bit about the nanny any other way...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
That came out of left field. The PP wasn't being mean, OP, there's no need to be mean yourself.
Oh c'mon. The PP was being insufferably sanctimonious. We lived in Africa! My DS was super active and I was super proud! Thank god my kid never had to meet a nanny! Ugh.
I didn't read it that way. I think you are a little overly sensitive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really OP, you are effing nuts. You called my kid slow, after I took the time to answer your question, but you are too think skinned to be called crazy and a bit** and deleted that post?
NP. I reported your post, not the OP. Good luck with your anger management![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
That came out of left field. The PP wasn't being mean, OP, there's no need to be mean yourself.
Oh c'mon. The PP was being insufferably sanctimonious. We lived in Africa! My DS was super active and I was super proud! Thank god my kid never had to meet a nanny! Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
WTF, OP?! Did you even read the PP?
Her son was not slow, and your son likely isn't either. Kids don't develop at the same pace.
I think you're actually the nanny trolling and wanting a pat on your back.
NO here and the first PP, the one who lived in Africa, is insufferable. I am glad the OP took her down.
Anonymous wrote:Really OP, you are effing nuts. You called my kid slow, after I took the time to answer your question, but you are too think skinned to be called crazy and a bit** and deleted that post?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
That came out of left field. The PP wasn't being mean, OP, there's no need to be mean yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
WTF, OP?! Did you even read the PP?
Her son was not slow, and your son likely isn't either. Kids don't develop at the same pace.
I think you're actually the nanny trolling and wanting a pat on your back.
NO here and the first PP, the one who lived in Africa, is insufferable. I am glad the OP took her down.
Anonymous wrote:You cannot compare girls to boys at this age. The girls will look like geniuses and the boys will look like cavemen. Girls develop verbal and fine motor skills far ahead of boys. Boys tend to be ahead in gross motor skills. And, of course, all kids develop at different speeds regardless of gender. My boys probably didn't learn colors until they were two and a half when they were finally talking in phrases.
Anonymous wrote:You cannot compare girls to boys at this age. The girls will look like geniuses and the boys will look like cavemen. Girls develop verbal and fine motor skills far ahead of boys. Boys tend to be ahead in gross motor skills. And, of course, all kids develop at different speeds regardless of gender. My boys probably didn't learn colors until they were two and a half when they were finally talking in phrases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you attending a sensory class? Does you kid have sensory issues? If not, it is like looking for something to be wrong at such a young age. Your child is fine, let your child run around and play, it will be more beneficial than sitting around and learning colors. We lived in Africa when my kids were young, DS was super active and I was super proud, he could out jump and outrun other kids. And he could catch a fly from behind with his forefinger and a thumb! No joke. Couldn't read until, ehh. who cares, he can read now. Think how lucky your DS is that his mom is with him and not his nanny.
OP here. No, DS doesn't have any sensory issues. It is a great and very fun class. And this nanny was better and more devoted to the child than half of the mothers in the class.
So sorry to hear that your son was slow. That must have been hard for him.
WTF, OP?! Did you even read the PP?
Her son was not slow, and your son likely isn't either. Kids don't develop at the same pace.
I think you're actually the nanny trolling and wanting a pat on your back.
NO here and the first PP, the one who lived in Africa, is insufferable. I am glad the OP took her down.
Really, what is insufferable? I was trying to tell her that it doesn't matter who knows colors at that age. I am truly stunned at the level of insanity of people who wonder if their child is delayed if they don't know colors after a year old. That she is spending time with her kid, and that is what matters. You and OP are insufferable ones, and she called my child slow! And you don't find that insufferable? I might have called her a bit**, but never would a stoop so slow as to call somebody's child slow even on an anonymous forum. And I am insufferable???
Your position that being at home with your child is more valuable than a nanny or other childcare giver. Especially since you were home and your son was a late reader! You, yourself, stated that your son was a slow to learn to read.