Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not funny.
It's not a sign that they are wittyand intelligent or have advance language skills.
They are rude.
It is a sign you have done a poor job teaching appropriate behavior
Provide an example or move on please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not funny.
It's not a sign that they are wittyand intelligent or have advance language skills.
They are rude.
It is a sign you have done a poor job teaching appropriate behavior
Provide an example or move on please.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t get this. Sarcasm is just sarcasm. A sarcastic statement can be funny, light, self-deprecating, pointed, angry, rude, disrespectful depending on context and delivery.
Anonymous wrote:It's not funny.
It's not a sign that they are wittyand intelligent or have advance language skills.
They are rude.
It is a sign you have done a poor job teaching appropriate behavior
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's case by case. If a child is very charming and otherwise warm/respectful with adults, then congrats your child has advanced social skills and can probably wield sarcasm successfully. My child does not have this skill and so sarcasm just sounds off-putting and disrespectful. I don't tell him all this, obviously, but I do advise him not to use sarcasm with teachers/adults.
I’d rather deal with your kid than the hypothetical one you described. Those kids tend to be manipulative, and often get away with bullying. They make a fool out of the adult.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's case by case. If a child is very charming and otherwise warm/respectful with adults, then congrats your child has advanced social skills and can probably wield sarcasm successfully. My child does not have this skill and so sarcasm just sounds off-putting and disrespectful. I don't tell him all this, obviously, but I do advise him not to use sarcasm with teachers/adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid with ADHD was quite the talker pre-medication. He got in trouble in kindergarten for something. I was coming to pick him up so the principal brought me into her office while my son was there. She said he was going to get lunch detention for his infraction and he didn't say anything. She repeated it and he still just sat there. She said, " You seem indifferent to what I'm saying. Do you know what indifferent means?" Without missing a beat, he said "I don't care." Lol. We both had to turn sideways so he wouldn't see us smiling.
That's what my mother would call "fresh" and it would get you a slap across the face. There's a time and a place for sarcasm and it's not with people in positions of authority when you're in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid with ADHD was quite the talker pre-medication. He got in trouble in kindergarten for something. I was coming to pick him up so the principal brought me into her office while my son was there. She said he was going to get lunch detention for his infraction and he didn't say anything. She repeated it and he still just sat there. She said, " You seem indifferent to what I'm saying. Do you know what indifferent means?" Without missing a beat, he said "I don't care." Lol. We both had to turn sideways so he wouldn't see us smiling.
That's what my mother would call "fresh" and it would get you a slap across the face. There's a time and a place for sarcasm and it's not with people in positions of authority when you're in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also your child isn't cute and no one wants to hear from it.
Op here. Not true . In general kids are cute and I enjoy hearing from them . However, certain behavior like sarcasm is not cute.
Sarcasm isn’t cute, it’s hilarious. It also isn’t rude. Rude is rude. I think you’re confusing the two.
I'm not confused. It's not hilarious. It's rude. Your child is rude .
Everyone disagrees with you.
Go sit down
NP - no EVERYONE disagrees..... unless you are a narcissist, then everyone is YOU.