Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all of the replies.
I realize I did not give much of the story of what happened before the exchange. DS needed multiple reminders to get up and get dressed, complained about breakfast, whined about putting on shoes and jacket, screamed when backpack strap got caught, and dawdled getting ready to go out the door. All of this meant we were ten minutes late going out the door. When I opened the trunk of the car to get my umbrella, he just stood behind me when I thought he would have been getting in the car. This is when I asked what was wrong with him, as in, you know to get in the car, and we are running late, so why are you just standing there?
To the better parents with perfect children and to those who feel sad for my kid, thank you for knowing how to parent well. Your children will be strong and I hope they will contribute to society. You cannot possibly know what it is like to deal daily with a volatile, explosive child. This child has told me multiple times "I am going to kill you" (no, I have never said that to him) and once said he would tell a police officer to shoot me. Many mornings I am exhausted just by the time I drop him off at school. The stress of parenting this child is, in fact, slowly killing me.
I have more than one, and this is the only child that acts this way, so I do not think it is not completely what I am doing wrong as a parent. Thanks to 10:21 and others who commented on having children with different temperaments. Yes, I am a flawed human, but I do try. Last year I spent $1500+ out of pocket on family therapy, which did not seem to help much. 19:43, I would appreciate the name of your psychologist.
And for those who needed to comment on ruining Christmas by leaving coal, I was venting and said I WISH I could do that. Of course this child will get something from Santa.
Anonymous wrote:Hi,
While I hope there is more that led to your conversation with your son you aren't sharing, I want to offer a thought to all the judgy McJudgersons on this thread.
I have twins. One is so sweet he literally mails love notes to relatives every day. The other is hell.on.wheels. Every day is a constant battle with this child. I love him to the moon and back but he often talks back, is rude, and is disrespectful. We ground him (take away his favorite toys), put him in time out, and always give him consequences. It doesn't stop the nonstop struggle with him and his behavior.
Before I had kids I thought a kids behavior was completely a product of nurture. If you spent any time with my sons who have been together and treated the same since the day they were born, you would see how big a role nature plays in a child's temperament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi,
While I hope there is more that led to your conversation with your son you aren't sharing, I want to offer a thought to all the judgy McJudgersons on this thread.
I have twins. One is so sweet he literally mails love notes to relatives every day. The other is hell.on.wheels. Every day is a constant battle with this child. I love him to the moon and back but he often talks back, is rude, and is disrespectful. We ground him (take away his favorite toys), put him in time out, and always give him consequences. It doesn't stop the nonstop struggle with him and his behavior.
Before I had kids I thought a kids behavior was completely a product of nurture. If you spent any time with my sons who have been together and treated the same since the day they were born, you would see how big a role nature plays in a child's temperament.
You don't think it has anything to do with the fact that you call one "sweet" and call the other "hell on wheels" and "disrespectful?"
Anonymous wrote:
That kind of crap will ruin a kid for Christmas forever. My mom gave my dad 30 silver dollars in a dirty sock for Christmas one year.
Anonymous wrote:I'm just going to assume that 90% of the posters are trolls, because no one can be so obviously obtuse. Kids start pushing the sass boundary around five years of age. It's a thing. If you have a 6yo who doesn't test boundaries, I'd be concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Hi,
While I hope there is more that led to your conversation with your son you aren't sharing, I want to offer a thought to all the judgy McJudgersons on this thread.
I have twins. One is so sweet he literally mails love notes to relatives every day. The other is hell.on.wheels. Every day is a constant battle with this child. I love him to the moon and back but he often talks back, is rude, and is disrespectful. We ground him (take away his favorite toys), put him in time out, and always give him consequences. It doesn't stop the nonstop struggle with him and his behavior.
Before I had kids I thought a kids behavior was completely a product of nurture. If you spent any time with my sons who have been together and treated the same since the day they were born, you would see how big a role nature plays in a child's temperament.