Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you have said if she asked you if there is really a Santa?
Lie lie lie. Santa is fun. However if my kid asks me about God I’m going to laugh and say “only stupid people believe that.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just your kid there is no god. I see moth wrong with telling the truth.
It’s your truth.
Do you think there’s any value in teaching kids that people hold a variety of beliefs, and that the search for truth and meaning is an ongoing and personal one?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well my 8 year-old just mentioned the other day at school that he did not believe in god and a kid told him he was going to hell. My kid said, that’s okay, I don’t believe in hell either. Then the kid said he hated my son.
This is my fear for my kid. Having experienced this myself. -OP
OP where do you live? Your statistical odds of your child having a similar conversation might be very, very low.
VA. I had this conversation here. 10 years ago.
NP: 3 years ago my at-that-time 3rd grader was told, at lunch, that if he didn’t believe in god, that he was going to be thrown into a volcano full of devils who would eat him. Then, later in the day he was cornered by another kid who had been at the same table who told him he was going to go to hell if he didn’t tell him he believed in god, and then blocked him there physically until my son was able to push past him. Fairfax County. Luckily, he had friends he can talk with, both religious and atheist, about that so he did not feel alone or freaked out. Of course he has us, but it’s good he has others his age to talk with, too. It all started when the conversation turned to church and my son started to talk about Buddhism and how there were many different types of religions and places of worship.
Anonymous wrote:What would you have said if she asked you if there is really a Santa?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well my 8 year-old just mentioned the other day at school that he did not believe in god and a kid told him he was going to hell. My kid said, that’s okay, I don’t believe in hell either. Then the kid said he hated my son.
This is my fear for my kid. Having experienced this myself. -OP
OP where do you live? Your statistical odds of your child having a similar conversation might be very, very low.
VA. I had this conversation here. 10 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well my 8 year-old just mentioned the other day at school that he did not believe in god and a kid told him he was going to hell. My kid said, that’s okay, I don’t believe in hell either. Then the kid said he hated my son.
This is my fear for my kid. Having experienced this myself. -OP
OP where do you live? Your statistical odds of your child having a similar conversation might be very, very low.
VA. I had this conversation here. 10 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well my 8 year-old just mentioned the other day at school that he did not believe in god and a kid told him he was going to hell. My kid said, that’s okay, I don’t believe in hell either. Then the kid said he hated my son.
This is my fear for my kid. Having experienced this myself. -OP
OP where do you live? Your statistical odds of your child having a similar conversation might be very, very low.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe OP should have titled the thread "How to tell kids I don't believe in God" then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well my 8 year-old just mentioned the other day at school that he did not believe in god and a kid told him he was going to hell. My kid said, that’s okay, I don’t believe in hell either. Then the kid said he hated my son.
This is my fear for my kid. Having experienced this myself. -OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you have said if she asked you if there is really a Santa?
Probably in the same way “what do you think? some people do/some don’t, etc”