Anonymous wrote:I've yelled in alarm to stop an injury from happening. Preventive yelling. We don't do reactionary after the fact yelling. Serious voice, stern looks, eye to eye communication, consequences, yes. They "hear" you when you make eye contact. You have to make that effort.
I've never heard my teens yell at anyone in anger (yelling in the excitement of a competition, yes, go team!). They are very good at talking it out, making themselves heard with indoor voices.
Anonymous wrote:I'm one of the pps who grew up with daily yelling and now I'm wondering if my definition of yelling is the same as everyone else's. When I think of yelling, I think of total loss of control of emotions and just screaming and yelling to a level that is completely overblown for the situation. It's not a simple "Larla!!! I've told you TWENTY times to go out your shoes on!".
So when I think of myself as a "no yelling" house it's because we've never lost control and just screamed at DS the way my mom would to me. But if people are talking about just getting frustrated and raising their voice a little, that's different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm one of the pps who grew up with daily yelling and now I'm wondering if my definition of yelling is the same as everyone else's. When I think of yelling, I think of total loss of control of emotions and just screaming and yelling to a level that is completely overblown for the situation. It's not a simple "Larla!!! I've told you TWENTY times to go out your shoes on!".
So when I think of myself as a "no yelling" house it's because we've never lost control and just screamed at DS the way my mom would to me. But if people are talking about just getting frustrated and raising their voice a little, that's different.
I said upthread that I yell daily, things like GET OFF YOUR BROTHER. What you’re describing is exactly what I count as my daily yelling. Things like getting dressed for school after I’ve said it 40 times to my 4 year old, or to get in the bath for the fifth time? Those will often escalate into an ENOUGH. Get in the bath! Etc. I count it as yelling.
Anonymous wrote:I'm one of the pps who grew up with daily yelling and now I'm wondering if my definition of yelling is the same as everyone else's. When I think of yelling, I think of total loss of control of emotions and just screaming and yelling to a level that is completely overblown for the situation. It's not a simple "Larla!!! I've told you TWENTY times to go out your shoes on!".
So when I think of myself as a "no yelling" house it's because we've never lost control and just screamed at DS the way my mom would to me. But if people are talking about just getting frustrated and raising their voice a little, that's different.
Anonymous wrote:I often repeat myself with escalating volume and frustration level. So yes.
Anonymous wrote:I'm one of the pps who grew up with daily yelling and now I'm wondering if my definition of yelling is the same as everyone else's. When I think of yelling, I think of total loss of control of emotions and just screaming and yelling to a level that is completely overblown for the situation. It's not a simple "Larla!!! I've told you TWENTY times to go out your shoes on!".
So when I think of myself as a "no yelling" house it's because we've never lost control and just screamed at DS the way my mom would to me. But if people are talking about just getting frustrated and raising their voice a little, that's different.