Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Social media now going off about how terrible millennials tend to be as parents, letting their kids run around like wild untamed animals. Boomers were already lax, now it has snowballed with millennials basically acting as their kids' best friends rather than act as their parents. Is millennial parenting as bad as they say? It does seem like a ton of kids these days could use a good ass whoopin'.
Seriously, cut it with the BOOMER shit.
My grand children are like animals with rabies. Their mothers did this not us old people. It comes from I will give my kids whatever they want and never teach them basic manners.
For example
Last year I got our grand daughter 2 beautiful necklaces. Instead of just saying thank you she said I'm not into that and I'm not about that. REALLY ? And her mother straight up asked me for the receipt. I told her to give it to someone that might appreciate it. GD then said she'll take the money I spent on it instead. She was 9 at the time. After that we never saw her again. Her mother's choice.
Current grand daughter is 11. She told us she wanted some headphones. She texted her grandfather a picture. When I saw the price I said hell no. A child does not need expensive headphones. Her mother said we had the means to buy those headphones so it's our duty to make the child happy. I said no. Pick something else or not. Yesterday that witch had the nerve to text Grandpa asking for $1000 to finish her Christmas shopping for the grandchild.
So yes, parenting 101 is a FAIL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Social media now going off about how terrible millennials tend to be as parents, letting their kids run around like wild untamed animals. Boomers were already lax, now it has snowballed with millennials basically acting as their kids' best friends rather than act as their parents. Is millennial parenting as bad as they say? It does seem like a ton of kids these days could use a good ass whoopin'.
Seriously, cut it with the BOOMER shit.
My grand children are like animals with rabies. Their mothers did this not us old people. It comes from I will give my kids whatever they want and never teach them basic manners.
For example
Last year I got our grand daughter 2 beautiful necklaces. Instead of just saying thank you she said I'm not into that and I'm not about that. REALLY ? And her mother straight up asked me for the receipt. I told her to give it to someone that might appreciate it. GD then said she'll take the money I spent on it instead. She was 9 at the time. After that we never saw her again. Her mother's choice.
Current grand daughter is 11. She told us she wanted some headphones. She texted her grandfather a picture. When I saw the price I said hell no. A child does not need expensive headphones. Her mother said we had the means to buy those headphones so it's our duty to make the child happy. I said no. Pick something else or not. Yesterday that witch had the nerve to text Grandpa asking for $1000 to finish her Christmas shopping for the grandchild.
So yes, parenting 101 is a FAIL.
Anonymous wrote:Millennials are more likely to be gentle, authoritative parents. To Boomers who are used to authoritarian parenting, it probably seems weak - but I bet Millennials’ offspring spend less time in therapy as adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Social media now going off about how terrible millennials tend to be as parents, letting their kids run around like wild untamed animals. Boomers were already lax, now it has snowballed with millennials basically acting as their kids' best friends rather than act as their parents. Is millennial parenting as bad as they say? It does seem like a ton of kids these days could use a good ass whoopin'.
Seriously, cut it with the BOOMER shit.
My grand children are like animals with rabies. Their mothers did this not us old people. It comes from I will give my kids whatever they want and never teach them basic manners.
For example
Last year I got our grand daughter 2 beautiful necklaces. Instead of just saying thank you she said I'm not into that and I'm not about that. REALLY ? And her mother straight up asked me for the receipt. I told her to give it to someone that might appreciate it. GD then said she'll take the money I spent on it instead. She was 9 at the time. After that we never saw her again. Her mother's choice.
Current grand daughter is 11. She told us she wanted some headphones. She texted her grandfather a picture. When I saw the price I said hell no. A child does not need expensive headphones. Her mother said we had the means to buy those headphones so it's our duty to make the child happy. I said no. Pick something else or not. Yesterday that witch had the nerve to text Grandpa asking for $1000 to finish her Christmas shopping for the grandchild.
So yes, parenting 101 is a FAIL.
But it's your parenting you are complaining about in addition to the grandkids right? The mom didn't behave how you taught her right?
Anonymous wrote:Social media now going off about how terrible millennials tend to be as parents, letting their kids run around like wild untamed animals. Boomers were already lax, now it has snowballed with millennials basically acting as their kids' best friends rather than act as their parents. Is millennial parenting as bad as they say? It does seem like a ton of kids these days could use a good ass whoopin'.
Anonymous wrote:I’m so confused. My parents/ILs (older than my folks) are Boomers, DH and I are Gen X. Our kids are 20 and 16, so Z? Why do so many Boomers have Millennials? And both sets of grandparents have been interested in the kids from day 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m so confused. My parents/ILs (older than my folks) are Boomers, DH and I are Gen X. Our kids are 20 and 16, so Z? Why do so many Boomers have Millennials? And both sets of grandparents have been interested in the kids from day 1.
Our Boomer parents were born 1957-60. DH and I were born mid 80s (millennials). Our kids are 7, 5, 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t see this type of parenting. I’m an older millennial (married to Gen X and have a lot of of friends in that age group). So maybe it skipped a generation?
Or is this an SES thing? I live in a close-in UMC neighborhood and the parents I see are generally involved and reasonable about parenting. Not a bunch of screaming, but no trantruming kids either (at least at the elementary level). The only ones I know like that have SNs and the parents are doing their best to get them help.
I’m curious what demographic this seems to be having this issue.
I agree, similar neighborhood and when I see this on sites like this I don't relate. My friends don't spank and if they yell a bunch one day they'll usually say crap I'm feeling guilty about that one. But at least when with them they also generally do hold boundaries, give consequences when appropriate, have their kid leave somewhere if they're losing it etc. All reasonable parenting. And I'm one of the SN parents that does sometimes have a tantrum here and there and am definitely not like "shrug" or just letting it impact others.
Anonymous wrote:I’m so confused. My parents/ILs (older than my folks) are Boomers, DH and I are Gen X. Our kids are 20 and 16, so Z? Why do so many Boomers have Millennials? And both sets of grandparents have been interested in the kids from day 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad got into a top 5 law school by showing up the month before classes began and chatting with the dean and showing them his LSAT score. No, it wasn't a perfect score. That's how easy it was to get into school back then. The generation gap has 100% to do with scare resources. We millennials go nuts trying to optimize kids to get into college because it's now impossible. That leads to all sorts of parenting decisions that seem baffling and wrong and pathetic to previous generations who weren't under this pressure.
What if I told you that raising happy, resilient, well-rounded and kind kids was as equally as important (if not more) than big earners?
I'd tell your kids have food insecurity and you shouldn't be proud of that.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see this type of parenting. I’m an older millennial (married to Gen X and have a lot of of friends in that age group). So maybe it skipped a generation?
Or is this an SES thing? I live in a close-in UMC neighborhood and the parents I see are generally involved and reasonable about parenting. Not a bunch of screaming, but no trantruming kids either (at least at the elementary level). The only ones I know like that have SNs and the parents are doing their best to get them help.
I’m curious what demographic this seems to be having this issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Millennials are over worked as they need to prop up boomers with their entitlements and lavish lifestyles. At the same time boomers are not helping their grandchildren financially or physically. Blame the boomers again, there is a long thread on this here https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1171410.page
Hahaha. The Gen Xers are the overworked ones.
Millennials and their kids are over the top addicted to screens. If the millennials are hands off and neglectful it would be more from being overwhelmed by digital distractions. Everything else is rationalization.