Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that would call the police/CPS, what would your end goal be? Would you want this child taken away from his mother and put in the foster care system?
I was a poster who said I would, if I saw a second instance, make a video and report to CPS. There is no chance of a child being removed from their parent *solely* based on a video of them swearing, but it might trigger a home check and so if the child was genuinely in danger, that child might be saved. I know it would be a huge hassle and stress on the parent, but weighed against the possibility of another child dying of abuse and neglect I would consider that a reasonable risk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This... isn't unusual. Unfortunate, sure. Not pleasant to witness. But not something that would leave me "shaken." You witnessed a bit more of the real world that you are used to.
You have a high tolerance for inappropriate behavior.
You don’t leave your UMC bubble much. This is a how many parents behave all the time
My umc mother treated me that way. I knew it was wrong then and, as a mother myself, I know it is wrong now. I have no tolerance for bad treatment of children. Just because people do it doesn't make it normal. I do live in a bubble because I want no part of that sh1t.
+1
I hope I never normalize emotional (or physical) abuse of children or anyone else. Rather live in a bubble than a world where this is normal parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This... isn't unusual. Unfortunate, sure. Not pleasant to witness. But not something that would leave me "shaken." You witnessed a bit more of the real world that you are used to.
You have a high tolerance for inappropriate behavior.
You don’t leave your UMC bubble much. This is a how many parents behave all the time
My umc mother treated me that way. I knew it was wrong then and, as a mother myself, I know it is wrong now. I have no tolerance for bad treatment of children. Just because people do it doesn't make it normal. I do live in a bubble because I want no part of that sh1t.
Anonymous wrote:For those that would call the police/CPS, what would your end goal be? Would you want this child taken away from his mother and put in the foster care system?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This... isn't unusual. Unfortunate, sure. Not pleasant to witness. But not something that would leave me "shaken." You witnessed a bit more of the real world that you are used to.
You have a high tolerance for inappropriate behavior.
You don’t leave your UMC bubble much. This is a how many parents behave all the time
My umc mother treated me that way. I knew it was wrong then and, as a mother myself, I know it is wrong now. I have no tolerance for bad treatment of children. Just because people do it doesn't make it normal. I do live in a bubble because I want no part of that sh1t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This... isn't unusual. Unfortunate, sure. Not pleasant to witness. But not something that would leave me "shaken." You witnessed a bit more of the real world that you are used to.
You have a high tolerance for inappropriate behavior.
You don’t leave your UMC bubble much. This is a how many parents behave all the time
Anonymous wrote:I have never cussed at, threatened, hit or even yelled at my kids ever. I know many of you do and think nothing of it. I was the child who was treated that way by my mother. It was abuse. Try to think long term when interacting with your child. I have a very distant relationship with my mom and feel no guilt or regret. She was a terrible parent and, if you do these things to your kids, you are too.
Anonymous wrote:I yell and curse ( at foreign language) a few time when I lose temper at kids. Just like today, I have to display 10 shirts for my beloved dd to pick one to get out of door. And, then she complains about the sock pattern. She drives me insane sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This... isn't unusual. Unfortunate, sure. Not pleasant to witness. But not something that would leave me "shaken." You witnessed a bit more of the real world that you are used to.
You have a high tolerance for inappropriate behavior.
Anonymous wrote:This... isn't unusual. Unfortunate, sure. Not pleasant to witness. But not something that would leave me "shaken." You witnessed a bit more of the real world that you are used to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a myth that “everybody” screams at their kid or curses. Every parent reaches a breaking point, sometimes. How you deal with that varies. I would not yell or curse, but I might burst into tears or grip an arm too hard (not like injury hard).
Basically though OP what you witnessed is sad and horrible but there’s nothing appropriate to do about it. It doesn’t rise to the level of reporting.
I would say gripping an arm too hard is worse than yelling or cursing!! Way worse in my book.
Much worse