Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband teases our 5-year-old daughter like he would a sibling. It is making me crazy because some teasing is ok, but he pushes and pushes until she inevitably screams, cries, starts hitting him, etc. And then he makes it like she is doing something wrong by reacting that way. He just does not pick up on her cues that it's enough. I typically hear it from another room and want to scream (and often do). I have told him often that he is instigating her and to stop. I feel like I'm watching siblings go at it. It's not demeaning type teasing like insults. It's more the stupid no I'm not, yes you are, or taunting her by saying something like, "oh, child doesn't like brownies, I'm eating the brownie." I don't know what his motivation is, but I'm so over it. Does anyone have advice?
fIL is like this but he has highly functioning autism and ADD inattentive.
He bugs both kids like no other- one of them tells him to stop, the other just stresses out
Anonymous wrote:OP here - husband has not talked about being bullied, but has said he didn't really have friends until college. I wonder if his dad was like this with him. His dad is very jokey. My husband and I also have a very playful, jokey relationship but I am an adult. My child doesn't understand the joking/teasing like I can. Sometimes she will say "are you kidding?" and it's playful and fine. But other times, he just pushes and pushes until she gets so frustrated she is yelling, whining, hitting him. It's those interactions that make me crazy.
He is successful at work, I stay at home by choice (have a law degree), so I don't think he's doing it because he feels inferior that way. No money troubles thankfully. I do think he thinks I get more of a say in what happens with our daughter, and I often do because I spend so much more time with her. but I don't see why that would cause the more extreme behavior. Like the behavior that if it were my own child doing it, I would put her in time out or take away a privilege.
Anonymous wrote:My husband teases our 5-year-old daughter like he would a sibling. It is making me crazy because some teasing is ok, but he pushes and pushes until she inevitably screams, cries, starts hitting him, etc. And then he makes it like she is doing something wrong by reacting that way. He just does not pick up on her cues that it's enough. I typically hear it from another room and want to scream (and often do). I have told him often that he is instigating her and to stop. I feel like I'm watching siblings go at it. It's not demeaning type teasing like insults. It's more the stupid no I'm not, yes you are, or taunting her by saying something like, "oh, child doesn't like brownies, I'm eating the brownie." I don't know what his motivation is, but I'm so over it. Does anyone have advice?
Anonymous wrote:Teach your DH that children are extremely literal creatures. They do not understand sarcasm or teasing until much older than you would expect. Even when they are a little older and pretending to get the joke because they know that is what they are supposed to do, they are internalizing the jibe as "the truth about me and my worth and my place in this relationship." These become deep-seated beliefs that shape them forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - husband has not talked about being bullied, but has said he didn't really have friends until college. I wonder if his dad was like this with him. His dad is very jokey. My husband and I also have a very playful, jokey relationship but I am an adult. My child doesn't understand the joking/teasing like I can. Sometimes she will say "are you kidding?" and it's playful and fine. But other times, he just pushes and pushes until she gets so frustrated she is yelling, whining, hitting him. It's those interactions that make me crazy.
He is successful at work, I stay at home by choice (have a law degree), so I don't think he's doing it because he feels inferior that way. No money troubles thankfully. I do think he thinks I get more of a say in what happens with our daughter, and I often do because I spend so much more time with her. but I don't see why that would cause the more extreme behavior. Like the behavior that if it were my own child doing it, I would put her in time out or take away a privilege.
I bet your husband is a terrible, bully boss. The ones who had no friends that are now successful usually have a massive chip on their shoulder.