Anonymous wrote:I'd need other examples. An extra book seems like a non issue, but a cookie before dinner on vacation? yay, fun! On a random tuesday, no way. You're setting yourself up for 18 years of issues
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if I am understanding correctly Jellyfish parenting is what psychologists would define as both permissive and uninvolved.
Permissive and uninvolved is neglectful parenting. Permissive and warm is jellyfish parenting.
Anonymous wrote:
Here's the truth.
You're just lazy. You just need to admit it to yourself before the consequences of your laziness start showing up in your child. And don't blame everybody else when they do.
Anonymous wrote:I think the things you cited are fine so long as they are not undermining your husband. If he told the kid no cookies before dinner then obviously don't agree to a cookie. If he's expressed to you that he wants to set up some better eating habits, then again, don't agree to a cookie before dinner.
Anonymous wrote:So if I am understanding correctly Jellyfish parenting is what psychologists would define as both permissive and uninvolved.
Anonymous wrote:If my DH feels strongly about a rule then I don't bend it without his ok. We both have things we're strict on - for me, homework must be done before screens. For DH, it's clutter in common areas. So while I don't care that my kid leaves his backpack on the dining room table overnight DH does, and so I enforce. One parent should not have to be the bad guy. If I think a rule of his is bad, or too much, or I don't want to enforce, we talk about it away from the kids and come to a decision that we uniformly present to the kids.
For other rules that aren't our personal pet peeves we bend occasionally. Staying up a little late if we're having fun, a cookie for no reason - these are fun things that are fine, as long as it doesn't have a "don't tell Dad" vibe. That's not fair to DH or your kids.