Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a lucky one - a few at-home meltdowns but never a public tantrum (or even misbehaving...it's like she saves it for home). I know it has nothing to do with me or my parenting style but I will take it and appreciate the sh*t out of it as long as it lasts!!!
OP here. I knew I couldn't be the only lucky one! This is just not the sort of thing you can ask people IRL. Not without sounding really obnoxious!
Are you also OP of parenting credit thread? You have same smug tone. Obnoxious is right.
OP here. No, I am not the OP of that other thread. Sorry I come off as obnoxious. I should have known better than to ask a question like this here.
I dont think you sound obnoxious at all. It's a fair question and like you said, where else can you ask?
Thanks PP. And actually I've found the responses here to be really interesting.
I agree this thread is not obnoxious, because the posters are not claiming credit for their kids' lack of tantrums. What would be obnoxious is the self-congratulatory and ridiculous kind of thing like "My kids have never had tantrums because I breastfed/always made sure they napped/gave them vegetables/don't allow screen time/give them a Serious Look and they know I mean business/am generally a great parent."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a lucky one - a few at-home meltdowns but never a public tantrum (or even misbehaving...it's like she saves it for home). I know it has nothing to do with me or my parenting style but I will take it and appreciate the sh*t out of it as long as it lasts!!!
OP here. I knew I couldn't be the only lucky one! This is just not the sort of thing you can ask people IRL. Not without sounding really obnoxious!
Are you also OP of parenting credit thread? You have same smug tone. Obnoxious is right.
OP here. No, I am not the OP of that other thread. Sorry I come off as obnoxious. I should have known better than to ask a question like this here.
I dont think you sound obnoxious at all. It's a fair question and like you said, where else can you ask?
Thanks PP. And actually I've found the responses here to be really interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a lucky one - a few at-home meltdowns but never a public tantrum (or even misbehaving...it's like she saves it for home). I know it has nothing to do with me or my parenting style but I will take it and appreciate the sh*t out of it as long as it lasts!!!
OP here. I knew I couldn't be the only lucky one! This is just not the sort of thing you can ask people IRL. Not without sounding really obnoxious!
Are you also OP of parenting credit thread? You have same smug tone. Obnoxious is right.
OP here. No, I am not the OP of that other thread. Sorry I come off as obnoxious. I should have known better than to ask a question like this here.
I dont think you sound obnoxious at all. It's a fair question and like you said, where else can you ask?
Anonymous wrote:I think it has to do with personality and also how well they can verbalize. Maybe some parenting too. Mine is 2.5 and has had some meltdowns but no real crazy tantrums. But her verbal skills are off the chart and her teacher says she's very mature for her age. I know we have the threenager stage coming though, so perhaps she's saving her tantrums for then.
Anonymous wrote:Older DS never threw a tantrum.
Younger DD is very, shall we say, *dramatic*???
Anonymous wrote:I have two. First was pretty even-keeled, never really threw a tantrum except for occasional meltdowns (i.e. crying hard for a minor issue, but nothing more). My second, totally different. Colic, demanding baby even as he grew up, basically he's been tantruming from birth. At about 13 months, he did his first full out lying-down kicking & screaming fit and I was like, whoa kid, this is going to be a long toddlerhood. (He is also more social and affectionate than my first - just *more* everything.) Given my experience I don't think parenting has any bearing on the *tendency* to tantrum, but may help in terms of handling them/ teaching your child self-regulation, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I would be worried if your kids are overly passive. That's just as weird as an occasional tantrum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think special needs kids have more tantrums? My SN kid has never had one. Ever. Two normal kids -- lots of tantrums.
If I saw a child hitting, kicking and screaming at their parent I would assume it was special needs related.
Hitting, kicking and screaming has nothing to do with special needs. My kid is special needs and has only hit another child once, who deserved it after hitting him many many times. He got sick of being hit, waited till I couldn't stop it, hit the child and that child never hit my kid again. Kids have tantrums. Hitting is not ok, but its NORMAL to have tantrums.