Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long have you been divorced? Has she seen a counselor?
Other than that I agree with everyone else. Too much for one day, and you should have taken her home as soon as she acted up. Get her out of one of those after school classes, it's too much after a full day of school.
She needs consequences for her behavior. Immediate consequences, not a trip to Chuck E Cheese.
I also think the child of divorced parents needs compassion and understanding, but go ahead and try locking her in her room to see if that fixes everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long have you been divorced? Has she seen a counselor?
Other than that I agree with everyone else. Too much for one day, and you should have taken her home as soon as she acted up. Get her out of one of those after school classes, it's too much after a full day of school.
She needs consequences for her behavior. Immediate consequences, not a trip to Chuck E Cheese.
I also think the child of divorced parents needs compassion and understanding, but go ahead and try locking her in her room to see if that fixes everything.
Uh do what now? I am a single mom and you can be darn sure I maintain proper expectations for my child and institute consequences as needed. Divorce is not an excuse not to parent your child properly.
Good for you. Just tell OP everything you do so she can do the same and I'm sure it'll work like a charm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long have you been divorced? Has she seen a counselor?
Other than that I agree with everyone else. Too much for one day, and you should have taken her home as soon as she acted up. Get her out of one of those after school classes, it's too much after a full day of school.
She needs consequences for her behavior. Immediate consequences, not a trip to Chuck E Cheese.
I also think the child of divorced parents needs compassion and understanding, but go ahead and try locking her in her room to see if that fixes everything.
Uh do what now? I am a single mom and you can be darn sure I maintain proper expectations for my child and institute consequences as needed. Divorce is not an excuse not to parent your child properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're placing a lot of blame on everything else. Where you live, the other kids, the other parent, YouTube. You need to accept some of the blame. You said your kid was acting like a brat all day....why did you take her to a movie and then to an arcade?! If she was acting like a brat after the plants, you go home.
And she needs to be bored. Kids need to be bored. They need to learn how to entertain themselves. Do arts and crafts, Legos , puzzles, board games....throw an at home movie day. Bake or do fun recipes. Go online and find activities to do at home with your kid.
Yeah, I’m not sure why OP is blaming everyone else. I would say divorce may be partly to blame for bad behavior.
I often think bad girl behavior comes from the mother or an older sister or both. They learn from your behavior.
Ask yourself honestly, do you think any of this is helpful? Do you think OP posted on here hoping to get rude comments from people about how her divorce messed up her child (you have no idea why she got divorced or if it was even her choice) and that her kid is a brat because the mom is a brat. Do you hear yourself?
I'm all for people taking accountability for their actions, but you didn't even try to couch your response by saying that OP needs to examine the situation she and her daughter are in to identify the factors that could be causing this. Nope, you just said it's her fault for everything and that's that.
I think there was some good advice in this thread. For example, divorced parents or not, it is generally not a good idea for most kids to have them in 2 activities each day after school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really don't think it's environmental: screens or divorce, or whatever else people always like to point to.
My kids are terminally online and are very calm people. I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times (combined) they've had tantrums in their lives - and they're 19 and 14.
Personality and volatility are mostly determined by genetic predisposition, so look to the parents. Were any of you volatile? Could you have been but were disciplined so much you were controlled by fear instead?
Impulsivity and anger like this is are red flags for hyperactive ADHD and anxiety. A neurotypical 9 year old does not have full blown tantrums like this, OP. You should have your daughter evaluated by a psychologist, because if she has ADHD, anxiety, or something else that's diagnosable, it's not going to go away by itself. It will need a specific parental approach, and quite likely therapy and medication.
Me again. I would also like to point out that adults are most likely to divorce if there are mental health issues in the relationship, theirs or their spouse's. So if OP's husband is impulsive and prone to anger, and they got divorced, etc, then OP's child exhibits the same psychological profile... it's not because they divorced that's she like this. It's because she inherited these personality traits from her father.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I, too, don’t understand all the activities on a weekend. Whatever happened to we will clean up the house until noon and then, head to the park or a hike for a few hours. Your job is not to entertain your child on the weekend. Instead, allow them to play, have a friend over and do their homework.
We do spend the morning cleaning and hanging out, although there’s not much to clean since it’s just us. By noon she’s complaining she’s bored.
We live in a really bad area in the middle of nowhere, so parks aren’t always the best option. It’s not uncommon for there to be homeless people, people using drugs, armed robbery, etc. So we usually try to go places that are safer.
Her school doesn’t give homework. We have play dates sometimes but her friends don’t always come from the best families. Like last time she went to play with a friend, the mom left the kids to go bail someone out of jail and brought him back to the house.
Unfortunately that’s just the reality of wheee we live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long have you been divorced? Has she seen a counselor?
Other than that I agree with everyone else. Too much for one day, and you should have taken her home as soon as she acted up. Get her out of one of those after school classes, it's too much after a full day of school.
She needs consequences for her behavior. Immediate consequences, not a trip to Chuck E Cheese.
I also think the child of divorced parents needs compassion and understanding, but go ahead and try locking her in her room to see if that fixes everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're placing a lot of blame on everything else. Where you live, the other kids, the other parent, YouTube. You need to accept some of the blame. You said your kid was acting like a brat all day....why did you take her to a movie and then to an arcade?! If she was acting like a brat after the plants, you go home.
And she needs to be bored. Kids need to be bored. They need to learn how to entertain themselves. Do arts and crafts, Legos , puzzles, board games....throw an at home movie day. Bake or do fun recipes. Go online and find activities to do at home with your kid.
Yeah, I’m not sure why OP is blaming everyone else. I would say divorce may be partly to blame for bad behavior.
I often think bad girl behavior comes from the mother or an older sister or both. They learn from your behavior.
Ask yourself honestly, do you think any of this is helpful? Do you think OP posted on here hoping to get rude comments from people about how her divorce messed up her child (you have no idea why she got divorced or if it was even her choice) and that her kid is a brat because the mom is a brat. Do you hear yourself?
I'm all for people taking accountability for their actions, but you didn't even try to couch your response by saying that OP needs to examine the situation she and her daughter are in to identify the factors that could be causing this. Nope, you just said it's her fault for everything and that's that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're placing a lot of blame on everything else. Where you live, the other kids, the other parent, YouTube. You need to accept some of the blame. You said your kid was acting like a brat all day....why did you take her to a movie and then to an arcade?! If she was acting like a brat after the plants, you go home.
And she needs to be bored. Kids need to be bored. They need to learn how to entertain themselves. Do arts and crafts, Legos , puzzles, board games....throw an at home movie day. Bake or do fun recipes. Go online and find activities to do at home with your kid.
Yeah, I’m not sure why OP is blaming everyone else. I would say divorce may be partly to blame for bad behavior.
I often think bad girl behavior comes from the mother or an older sister or both. They learn from your behavior.
Anonymous wrote:I really don't think it's environmental: screens or divorce, or whatever else people always like to point to.
My kids are terminally online and are very calm people. I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times (combined) they've had tantrums in their lives - and they're 19 and 14.
Personality and volatility are mostly determined by genetic predisposition, so look to the parents. Were any of you volatile? Could you have been but were disciplined so much you were controlled by fear instead?
Impulsivity and anger like this is are red flags for hyperactive ADHD and anxiety. A neurotypical 9 year old does not have full blown tantrums like this, OP. You should have your daughter evaluated by a psychologist, because if she has ADHD, anxiety, or something else that's diagnosable, it's not going to go away by itself. It will need a specific parental approach, and quite likely therapy and medication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the screens and too much stuff going on. 3 activities in a weekend day? You are clearly trying to make up for the divorce. Do some crafts at home, read books together etc.
I have an 8yo daughter and we often have 2-3 things going on. I have 3 kids though so the 8yo may be going to sibling’s games.
I’m not sure why OP would take her kid to Chuck E Cheese.
I don’t think it is fair OP is making up for divorce. We know kids who are only children and parents fill the day more than kids with multiple siblings.
My 8yo is a dream. I never buy her random things. I try hard NOT to spoil her.
Anonymous wrote:How long have you been divorced? Has she seen a counselor?
Other than that I agree with everyone else. Too much for one day, and you should have taken her home as soon as she acted up. Get her out of one of those after school classes, it's too much after a full day of school.
She needs consequences for her behavior. Immediate consequences, not a trip to Chuck E Cheese.