Anonymous wrote:Totally typical, and not at all “off point”. And my goodness, if a coach was fired for losing his temper, I would certainly give a heads-up to a friend. You’re unfairly comparing your DD to her older sibling and pathologizing normal 13 year old behavior. This is going to alienate your DD.
Anonymous wrote:This is a sign of her being impolitic, not autistic. Big, big difference.
13 is a hard age. In reality, it might be better for the kids to not have know full situation about the firing, although clearly they would logically surmise what happened. Then the gossiping would be more gossip than facts.
It sounds like, given her propensity to do this, you need to identify situations where it could happen and proactively tell her she should keep certain things to herself. I know you can't do every one, but some. So, you need to say things like, "As you know, you have a new coach now, one that we feel is better for your team. But, you still are very involved in Sport X, and may know others who are okay with his/her coaching style. It's important to keep your feelings to yourself."
Of course, depending on the level of temper issues, you may have other responsibilities to protect future athletes under this coach's charge, but I'm assuming there are no concerns there (not physical or verbal abuse).
You may also want to consider what you tell and don't tell your daughter. I have one child I would share more with than the other (both same age). One is just more trustworthy. I hope that will change, but right now I have to deal with the way it is.
Anonymous wrote:Your DD is 13 and she lacks a filter and social finesse. That is totally normal. She's still a child. She doesn't totally understand social graces. She's THIRTEEN.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you’re either over sharing way too much with your older child, or depending on your older child to parent the younger one too much. I’ve seen that happen, where the older child is advanced/gifted/wise beyond her years/basically a goddess and he younger child is never able to live up to those standards, just because she’s different. Not bad, just doesn’t do things the way the golden child would. The biggest problem occurs when the parents and older child team up against the other child.
I can’t imagine having in depth conversations with my son about his sister that would result in him suggesting she’s on the spectrum for gossiping (aka telling a true story to someone who could be affected by the info presented in the story).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should give a better example than that. A coach got fired for anger management issues and you want to protect the coach, and you got mad at your daughter for not protecting a grown man whose behavior toward children was so bad he lost his job for it. I took what she did as warning her friend to watch out for a problematic, possibly abusive (verbally, emotionally) coach. I’ve seen some of the stuff coaches get away with so for someone to be fired for anger management issues sounds pretty bad.
I call what your dd did: looking out for a friend and warning her about a possible problem.
I call what you did: worrying about what other people think about you rather than caring about your dd and her friend.
OP here. I understand what you are saying, PP, and that makes me want to clarify/add information.
First, if she had done it to warn her friend, that would make sense. But it was to gossip/tell funny stories.
Second, nobody is in danger here, and the coach IS a yeller but it's arguable if he is too much of a yeller. For instance if he were coaching on a boys' team, I don't think there would be an issue. I think the owners wanted a different style, a more positive approach. Some parents/kids were relieved he was gone; some parents/kids went with him.
Second, it's not about me; I don't get how you got there, PP. I'm worried about my DDs seemingly lack of ability to think three steps ahead in a social situation. She could have told her friend in a more serious manner, in concern about her, and I would have had no problem with this. But she was just shooting her mouth off, unaware of the ramifications to the coach's reputation and also to HER future working with the school coach. The circle is small enough that one has to have a little tact.
And I brought it up here only because my older DC said I need to question my own assumptions about if this is normal behavior, because DD is 13, not 7, and should know better by now, and it's not just a one-off "whoops" but a blind spot. If, as another PP said, cut her slack because she's 13 and it's normal, then fine. Maybe my DC is advanced on this issue, so to her, my DD looks to be lagging...I'm just not sure which way to look at it. My DC is very astute so I'm trying to look at it in a different way and that's why I'm asking.