Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, it was zip lining. DD is being treated for certain issues and is not "typical" in some ways. So it can be very difficult to know how to navigate day to day with her. I went with my instincts on this but am paying for it now.
Tell your husband to grow up and stop pouting.
“Dave, I know you are disappointed that Larla was too frightened to try zip lining, but you need to get over it. Your bad mood is impacting all of us and ruining the trip. You need to tell Larla it’s all good and we need to focus on having fun for the rest of the trip. Got it?”
Your kid probably developed anxiety from your husband’s overbearing, controlling personality and passive-aggressive (or simply aggressive) behavior. I’m observing this in soooo many families. Your husband needs therapy.
Good Lord with the idiotic scripts people tell people to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, it was zip lining. DD is being treated for certain issues and is not "typical" in some ways. So it can be very difficult to know how to navigate day to day with her. I went with my instincts on this but am paying for it now.
Tell your husband to grow up and stop pouting.
“Dave, I know you are disappointed that Larla was too frightened to try zip lining, but you need to get over it. Your bad mood is impacting all of us and ruining the trip. You need to tell Larla it’s all good and we need to focus on having fun for the rest of the trip. Got it?”
Your kid probably developed anxiety from your husband’s overbearing, controlling personality and passive-aggressive (or simply aggressive) behavior. I’m observing this in soooo many families. Your husband needs therapy.
Good Lord with the idiotic scripts people tell people to say.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think there's a right or wrong here. I have a kid with anxiety and dh and I have different approaches. Sometimes one of us is right and something's the other. There's no way to predict how many things will play out, and we're often surprised and how things go. She's a work in process and we're all still learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team DH. Don't let your kids take your family hostage like that. That's some seriously spoiled behavior. If it's anxiety or something, learn how not to coddle that, it will only make things worse.
Says a person whose kids clearly don’t have anxiety.
My daughter has anxiety. You know what finally got her through it? Learning to not use it as a crutch and parents who stopped coddling. Try it sometime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team DH. Don't let your kids take your family hostage like that. That's some seriously spoiled behavior. If it's anxiety or something, learn how not to coddle that, it will only make things worse.
Says a person whose kids clearly don’t have anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, it was zip lining. DD is being treated for certain issues and is not "typical" in some ways. So it can be very difficult to know how to navigate day to day with her. I went with my instincts on this but am paying for it now.
Tell your husband to grow up and stop pouting.
“Dave, I know you are disappointed that Larla was too frightened to try zip lining, but you need to get over it. Your bad mood is impacting all of us and ruining the trip. You need to tell Larla it’s all good and we need to focus on having fun for the rest of the trip. Got it?”
Your kid probably developed anxiety from your husband’s overbearing, controlling personality and passive-aggressive (or simply aggressive) behavior. I’m observing this in soooo many families. Your husband needs therapy.
Anonymous wrote:My DS who is 8 doesn’t have any anxiety or issues like that.
He is not the adventurous type, too cautious IMO. I pushed him since he was 5 or so realizing this. Initially small like climbing wall, ropes course at kiddie place and so forth.
We just got back from Costa Rica and he was hesitant to zip line over the cloud forest. It was high. A little push helped and once he did it, he loved it.
I think it’s important to have kids get out of their comfort zone, try new things, and take a little risk. It’s OK. These skills are important life skills IMO. Sometimes taking risks in life pays big dividends in work, relationship, finances. Lots of people are paralyzed by fear and it hold them back overall.
Anonymous wrote:You are teaching her to be a confident, self-sufficient adult. That’s the goal, right?
Well confident, self-sufficient adults speak up when they don’t want to do something, or don’t feel well, or can’t afford something, etc. Grown adults get to decide how to spend their vacation.
DD spoke up about her feelings and was ignored. So any sunk cost is on DH, not her. The unplanned group separation is on DH, not her. Maybe next time he will listen to, respect, and consider all the wants, needs and preferences of everyone going on the vacation. Your daughters are clearly past the age of being dragged around with no say-so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is impossible for any of us to judge who is in the right here not knowing your kid and not being there at the time. I have been in this exact situation with my kids where I know they would love something, but they are scared and won't do it, but just need that extra push. Pushing through anxiety and coming out the other side is one of the best feelings in life. Whether it is getting up in front of the class for the class play, or zip lining, or soccer tryouts, sometimes you just have to do it despite being scared or afraid.
For all of the "zip-lining is dangerous" types, it absolutely isn't. I think there is a lot of scared parents on this thread that are projecting their own fears onto the child in OPs post.
Any activity that requires you to sign waiver of liability is okay to refuse.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is impossible for any of us to judge who is in the right here not knowing your kid and not being there at the time. I have been in this exact situation with my kids where I know they would love something, but they are scared and won't do it, but just need that extra push. Pushing through anxiety and coming out the other side is one of the best feelings in life. Whether it is getting up in front of the class for the class play, or zip lining, or soccer tryouts, sometimes you just have to do it despite being scared or afraid.
For all of the "zip-lining is dangerous" types, it absolutely isn't. I think there is a lot of scared parents on this thread that are projecting their own fears onto the child in OPs post.