Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this about? My DD14 didn’t know and honestly wasn’t outwardly bothered, but I’m curious what this little twerp was attempting to gain.
"Just a Gdawg saying hi to a cute kitten?" That came up in a search of recent trends. If the girl likes the guy back, she is supposed to purr.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Barking is not just weird. It’s so pathetic that mothers of sons are acting like the more reasonable explanation of this boy feeling entitled to insult this girl is impossible.
Girls aren’t “sluts.” Were none of you actual girls?
I have a teen boy and as a woman who was once a girl and a decent human being I would never refer to anyone as a slut, much less a teen girl. That's despicable and wrong on so many levels. It just speaks to their hatred of women and girls.
But please don't think that every boy who does something dumb like bark is doing it to insult a girl. They are kids and do dumb shit. If I heard my son barking at a girl, I'd tell him to never to do that again and that it's not acceptable, of course. But it's really not that deep.
Anonymous wrote:Barking is not just weird. It’s so pathetic that mothers of sons are acting like the more reasonable explanation of this boy feeling entitled to insult this girl is impossible.
Girls aren’t “sluts.” Were none of you actual girls?
Anonymous wrote:I agree this falls under “kids are weird”. I’m also not sure it’s a phenomenon limited to teens. One of my favorite memories was taking my 2 year old daughter to visit another family’s house where their 6 year old son was pretending to be a dog – crawling around on all fours, barking, and so on. It went on long enough to begin to feel annoying to me. But then my daughter leaned over and whispered in my ear, “Daddy, I LOVE him.” I asked if she wanted to say hi to the boy, so she walked over and sat next to him and said “hi”. It completely threw the boy off and he was quiet for the rest of our visit.
Anonymous wrote:Teen boys are dumb. It’s really nothing.
And teen girls are dumb too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, how precious that you’re puzzling over a boy barking at some random girl! Your DD14 didn’t bat an eye, but you, you clever thing, just can’t resist dissecting this twerp’s brilliant strategy—flirting or foolishness? You’re too kind to care so much!
Is another #boymom hogging that one brain cell you all share?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this about? My DD14 didn’t know and honestly wasn’t outwardly bothered, but I’m curious what this little twerp was attempting to gain.
Hint - most teen boys are not that manipulative and they have zero impulse control, so not sure what you mean about attempting to gain.
Anonymous wrote:He’s 14. That’s your answer. Ignore.
That said, I have a 13 and 15 year old boys and they would be horrified by that idea
My 15 year old bikes to school. He gets screamed at by cars of girls. No barking but just screaming. Weird but he moves on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a mom of a 15 year old boy I can tell you that most of the time they are just being extremely dumb, and it's probably nothing to do with your daughter but rather his effort to get her attention.
It’s this. When he’s older, he will be the guy next to you, catcalling and revving his engine at the red light. They don’t know any other way to get female attention.
Anonymous wrote:As a mom of a 15 year old boy I can tell you that most of the time they are just being extremely dumb, and it's probably nothing to do with your daughter but rather his effort to get her attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disgusting. Both PP and the teen boy. May he get punched for this in the near future.
OP here. He looked very punchable. Worse, he was being driven by a grown man. If they weren’t in traffic and since I know his parenting is likely trash anyway so it would be pointless, I would have said something.
Anonymous wrote:That’s hilarious!
Anonymous wrote:I agree this falls under “kids are weird”. I’m also not sure it’s a phenomenon limited to teens. One of my favorite memories was taking my 2 year old daughter to visit another family’s house where their 6 year old son was pretending to be a dog – crawling around on all fours, barking, and so on. It went on long enough to begin to feel annoying to me. But then my daughter leaned over and whispered in my ear, “Daddy, I LOVE him.” I asked if she wanted to say hi to the boy, so she walked over and sat next to him and said “hi”. It completely threw the boy off and he was quiet for the rest of our visit.