Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Group childcare combined with detached parents.
Totally agree with this. Most kids that went to daycare from an early age seem to be bullies (even at 3-4 years of age). All kids that spent the first year or so with parents or nanny where they got undivided attention are so much nicer and more empathetic.
+1
I completely disagree with this.
—former SAHM and current preschool teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Group childcare combined with detached parents.
This. Read “Hold On To Your Kids” by Mate.
(Obviously, not forever.)
This really doesn't explain the middle school Queen Bee phenomenon, who tend to be wealthier kids with parents who put enormous focus on appearance and who usually have a parent who doesn't work or doesn't work much, though. Those kids don't have group childcare experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Group childcare combined with detached parents.
This. Read “Hold On To Your Kids” by Mate.
(Obviously, not forever.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Group childcare combined with detached parents.
No. It’s overly attached parents. The mothers who bring everything the child does back to herself. Mean girls have overly involved mean mothers (firing nannies, housekeepers, anyone the child is attached to without warning; dropping friends).
I don’t know what you mean by group care. School?
Studies show that bullies are often the kids who were red shirted. Bigger and older than other kids. They are more likely to pick on and manipulate others. More likely to single out the emotionally or physical oh immature kids as victims.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think it is in their nature to be mean? Tv? Parents? Someone else was mean to them first?
I have an elementary child who dealt with mean girls teasing and just being mean to my child all year. My child is generally well liked but these girls are just mean, not just to my child but to one another and other kids in class.
I also have a preschool child. My friend’s daughter purposely excludes my younger child and I witnessed her taunting and laughing at my child after making my child cry.
It is one thing for kids in school. This girl is my very good friend’s daughter. It makes me wonder what kind of person my friend is. She is a great friend to me but her daughter is a little mean brat. I’m probably going to avoid family gatherings for a while. Don’t want to necessarily end our friendship but it really makes me question my friend. My friend thinks her daughter is an angel. Not sure if she is in denial or truly doesn’t know.
I couldn't be friends with anyone who thinks their kid is an angel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know - I mean I think 80% is parents, but there is 20% that is temperament and self-esteem/insecurity issues - I have one child that is the nicest kid and so intuitive and kind and wins kindness awards at camp and school. I have another and we have been working on kindness for about 5 years - and it's SO much better, but it's a work in progress - her's comes from social anxiety and low self -esteem - we work really really hard.
This is us. One child (boy) is the kindest most empathetic yet popular boy. He wins character awards in every setting, multiple times as the character award winner for the whole camp. He was born this way. Other child (girl) was not born with the empathy gene. We CONSTANTLY work on kindness, inclusivity, empathy and always have. It is not natural to her. She is a powerful, popular, very attractive teen now and was always so. I think we have done ok overall considering but she has caused mental anguish in the past. I know it is not from us. I am am a total bleeding heart. We keep working with her and have tried to take responsibility when she has hurt someone.
Anonymous wrote:Parents.
Look no further than the hard-partying cliques of moms and dads. The ones off having block parties, happy hours, throwing themselves birthday parties, taking vacations together, tailgating at youth football games, hanging out with travel sports parents - they're the ones sitting at the hotel bar and shutting it down, running boosters and coming up with new ways to socially engineer their kids' lives. They set up a cabal of sorts. If you complain or challenge...watch out...you, the adult, are the social pariah.
Yes, these people are my neighbors and collectively, their kids are mean girls/boys. Anything to be be popular! The kids all date each other, play on the same teams, hang at their parents' parties, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Group childcare combined with detached parents.
No. It’s overly attached parents. The mothers who bring everything the child does back to herself. Mean girls have overly involved mean mothers (firing nannies, housekeepers, anyone the child is attached to without warning; dropping friends).
I don’t know what you mean by group care. School?
Anonymous wrote:Do you think it is in their nature to be mean? Tv? Parents? Someone else was mean to them first?
I have an elementary child who dealt with mean girls teasing and just being mean to my child all year. My child is generally well liked but these girls are just mean, not just to my child but to one another and other kids in class.
I also have a preschool child. My friend’s daughter purposely excludes my younger child and I witnessed her taunting and laughing at my child after making my child cry.
It is one thing for kids in school. This girl is my very good friend’s daughter. It makes me wonder what kind of person my friend is. She is a great friend to me but her daughter is a little mean brat. I’m probably going to avoid family gatherings for a while. Don’t want to necessarily end our friendship but it really makes me question my friend. My friend thinks her daughter is an angel. Not sure if she is in denial or truly doesn’t know.
Anonymous wrote:I think most people posting here haven't seen middle school yet.