Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We yell most days. Personally I think the conflict adverse houses and kids are a lot more anxious.
Genuine question for people who describe houses where people don't yell as "conflict adverse." Do you yell in the rest of your life? I don't yell at my spouse or my coworkers or my friends, and they don't yell at me. We have conflicts; we just talk normally through them. It seems odd to me to expect yelling.
I don't describe no yelling as conflict averse but I think that my four year old's ability to talk through the conflict of wanting to keep playing indefinitely instead of putting on his shoes to go to pre-K is probably pretty limited compared to your spouse and coworkers.
Most of my yelling happens when my kids need to stop doing something fun and do something necessary (wash hands for dinner, put on shoes, brush teeth, etc). It's either repetition more loudly or threats (aka consequences). I wish they'd logically understand that oral health is more important than squeezing out 5 more minutes of Legos, but alas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We yell most days. Personally I think the conflict adverse houses and kids are a lot more anxious.
Genuine question for people who describe houses where people don't yell as "conflict adverse." Do you yell in the rest of your life? I don't yell at my spouse or my coworkers or my friends, and they don't yell at me. We have conflicts; we just talk normally through them. It seems odd to me to expect yelling.
Anonymous wrote:To me yelling = raising my voice after repeating self for the tenth time; screaming = “flying off the handle,” the thing that is never okay, which I’ve done once, and come close to maybe twice. But being more willing to yell at all seems to open the door to screaming. So as a childhood recipient of both, I feel awful after I’ve “yelled.” Even literally just increasing the volume must have a physiological effect on both parties, right? Like something linked to aggression or a warning of danger? I don’t really know what it looks like, but I’m working on becoming the parent that never even raises their voice. I wish I could get there faster, I can’t pause my kids’ childhoods
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't have the same relationship with your coworkers. You aren't responsible for them or required to teach them. Coworkers get fired when they don't do well.
I'm pretty sure I heard my boss say we were a family![]()
But seriously, a boss's responsibilities do include teaching and feedback. Most don't yell at their employees (and most employees would quit if yelled at). That tells me yelling at home is taking out your anger and stress on somebody who cannot leave.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly? We yell at some point most days Sometimes it takes a sharp ‘GET OFF YOUR BROTHER’ to prevent an injury, and I’m okay with that.
Yelling usually only happens after a long period of calmness though, so generally I think we are fairly measured.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We yell most days. Personally I think the conflict adverse houses and kids are a lot more anxious.
Genuine question for people who describe houses where people don't yell as "conflict adverse." Do you yell in the rest of your life? I don't yell at my spouse or my coworkers or my friends, and they don't yell at me. We have conflicts; we just talk normally through them. It seems odd to me to expect yelling.