Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wonder if they do this in libraries.
Of course they do. These are the kids that are nightmares in restaurants, at play dates, in stores, etc. It’s not their fault. It’s simply the result of poor parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People keep saying “get back to us when you have kids!” but weren’t we all kids at one time? I never did this to my parents’ furniture as a kid. Y’all were jumping all over your furniture growing up?
And I bet you never built a fort out of couch cushions and blankets either? Because that would be disrespectful?
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I think jumping on furniture in your own home is ok depending on the parents rules. Kids are cooped up during the cold months and no jumping at all is not something I'd want to enforce.
However, I'd never let them jump on anyone else's furniture.
Anonymous wrote:Once they are five and three, the couch has been peed on so many times that a few jumps up and down are not going to hurt it.
LiberalAnonymous wrote:People keep saying “get back to us when you have kids!” but weren’t we all kids at one time? I never did this to my parents’ furniture as a kid. Y’all were jumping all over your furniture growing up?
Anonymous wrote:Wonder if they do this in libraries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have their own set of rules in their own homes and chose to be focus or not focus on certain things as they please. It’s not for you to judge or try to “understand” where the line is to be drawn.
I for one never understood the wording “respecting furniture”. In my house, my kids are not allowed to jump on the couches. But that is the rule. They were expected to follow the rule. Period. They respect US, and therefore followed the rules. They never respected the couch. That’s stupid. The couch is a thing. We don’t respect things. Now that my kids are older they understand they have to take care of things because they cost money and someone has to work hard to get them. And therefore they have to respect the person who is working and not treat things as disposable pieces of garbage. Again, they respect the person, not the thing.
You sound fun!