Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People compliment my children's manners all the time. They are kind and well mannered. We raised them by good example. We never hit our kids. If they were out of line, they got time out but also we explained why and made them aware of other people's feelings and perspectives.
Every rude kid was trained by a rude parent.
Ahh got it. So autistic children who others see as “rude” are that way because their “rude” parents trained them to be that way. Makes sense.
Sorry but some kids just need more intensive parenting. Some kids need explicit instruction and rules for how to not be seen as rude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't do "gentle parenting". Teach obedience. Underrated skill these days.
Model politeness yourself (don't snap at wait staff, say please and thank you, etc.).
Nip interrupting habits in the bud. We started teaching our child not to interrupt at 2. It is still a work in progress but we do not tolerate it.
I promise that your kid will one day either run away or completely rebel against everything you teach them. It’s a story as old as time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People compliment my children's manners all the time. They are kind and well mannered. We raised them by good example. We never hit our kids. If they were out of line, they got time out but also we explained why and made them aware of other people's feelings and perspectives.
Every rude kid was trained by a rude parent.
Ahh got it. So autistic children who others see as “rude” are that way because their “rude” parents trained them to be that way. Makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't do "gentle parenting". Teach obedience. Underrated skill these days.
Model politeness yourself (don't snap at wait staff, say please and thank you, etc.).
Nip interrupting habits in the bud. We started teaching our child not to interrupt at 2. It is still a work in progress but we do not tolerate it.
I promise that your kid will one day either run away or completely rebel against everything you teach them. It’s a story as old as time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like tips on this as well.
My kid is actually pretty polite to other people but has recently become quite rude to us at home. I thought we were doing very well but obviously we've gone wrong somewhere because some of the behavior is quite bad. We don't tolerate it -- there are always consequences. Sometimes the consequences just provoke more rudeness though. She is 6.
This is also seeping into behavior towards others, however. While she is still very polite to people's faces, recently she threw a huge fit when I said we needed to write a thank you note for a gift a friend had sent. Just a few months ago this would have been a non-issue -- she is proud of her writing and loves sending/receiving mail, so this has never been a challenge in the 2-3 years that we've been doing it.
I am at a loss. I've been reading books on teaching children manners and dealing with rudeness in early elementary, but many of them focus on kids who never had these skills. For us it is a mystery because she's always been pretty mild-mannered and polite, helpful and kind at home. But lately she rolls her eyes at us, refuses to do basic things like clear her plate from the table, orders us around, or when she's really mad, says she hates us or wants us to die. I do not understand what has happened.
For what it's worth, we are always polite and respectful towards her, which I felt was a good way to teach manners and seemed to be working until recently.
How's her sleep? My normally well-behaved kids get really snippy when they're tired.
Also, how much screen time does she get?
Very little screen time. Like maybe 2 hours of TV time a week, no tablets.
Sleep has always been tricky with her. She struggles to fall asleep at night and I do think sometimes being overtired exacerbates this year issue. But it's been going on long enough (around 5 months) that I don't think it can just be that.
Anonymous wrote:People compliment my children's manners all the time. They are kind and well mannered. We raised them by good example. We never hit our kids. If they were out of line, they got time out but also we explained why and made them aware of other people's feelings and perspectives.
Every rude kid was trained by a rude parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m exceedingly polite, and model it, and my kid is polite to others but a rude princess with me . So I don’t think being polite is a magic bullet for parents.
This! I'm super polite and my kid has great manners with other people. Still stuff to work on (she tends to monologue a bit and can be an overshare, though it comes from just being gregarious) but she is never rude or unkind to others.
But with me? She can be downright awful. And I don't just put up with it -- I insist on pleases and thank yous and don't allow her to order me around or make rude noises at me. There are always consequences for her rude behavior. But it persists.
The books say she takes it out on me because she's working so hard to have manners at school and around others. Brutal if true!
Anonymous wrote:I’m exceedingly polite, and model it, and my kid is polite to others but a rude princess with me . So I don’t think being polite is a magic bullet for parents.
Anonymous wrote:People compliment my children's manners all the time. They are kind and well mannered. We raised them by good example. We never hit our kids. If they were out of line, they got time out but also we explained why and made them aware of other people's feelings and perspectives.
Every rude kid was trained by a rude parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's 100 percent the parenting.
Poorly behaved children always have terrible parents.
Horrible begets horrible
Meh.
Some of us lucked out.
My parents did too. Well, mostly. They got 4 out 5. I was a terror, but I had undiagnosed medical issues that contributed to me being angry all the time.
Anonymous wrote:It's 100 percent the parenting.
Poorly behaved children always have terrible parents.
Horrible begets horrible
Anonymous wrote:Don't do "gentle parenting". Teach obedience. Underrated skill these days.
Model politeness yourself (don't snap at wait staff, say please and thank you, etc.).
Nip interrupting habits in the bud. We started teaching our child not to interrupt at 2. It is still a work in progress but we do not tolerate it.