Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t hang out with them. Say hello and keep walking.
This is so horrible. I went through a period where I was struggling with my DC. Know what made it even more hellish? Being iced out and avoided by the entire community. It was a really traumatic time in my life (kids ended up having multiple disabilities) and the community basically blaming me for the way my kid was wired put it over the edge. You can engage with the parents without involving their children, especially at this age.
Your kid with “disabilities” makes everyone miserable. When my kid comes home with yet another story about their classroom being evacuated because your kid threw a violent tantrum…honestly you are lucky the other parents DONT talk to you. I have some choice words for the parents of these little monsters but I just keep it moving.
+1 parent your child, with or without disabilities. No excuses.
hate has no home, except for the disabled?
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t hang out with them. Say hello and keep walking.
This is so horrible. I went through a period where I was struggling with my DC. Know what made it even more hellish? Being iced out and avoided by the entire community. It was a really traumatic time in my life (kids ended up having multiple disabilities) and the community basically blaming me for the way my kid was wired put it over the edge. You can engage with the parents without involving their children, especially at this age.
Your kid with “disabilities” makes everyone miserable. When my kid comes home with yet another story about their classroom being evacuated because your kid threw a violent tantrum…honestly you are lucky the other parents DONT talk to you. I have some choice words for the parents of these little monsters but I just keep it moving.
+1 parent your child, with or without disabilities. No excuses.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t hang out with them. Say hello and keep walking.
This is so horrible. I went through a period where I was struggling with my DC. Know what made it even more hellish? Being iced out and avoided by the entire community. It was a really traumatic time in my life (kids ended up having multiple disabilities) and the community basically blaming me for the way my kid was wired put it over the edge. You can engage with the parents without involving their children, especially at this age.
Your kid with “disabilities” makes everyone miserable. When my kid comes home with yet another story about their classroom being evacuated because your kid threw a violent tantrum…honestly you are lucky the other parents DONT talk to you. I have some choice words for the parents of these little monsters but I just keep it moving.
+1 parent your child, with or without disabilities. No excuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t hang out with them. Say hello and keep walking.
This is so horrible. I went through a period where I was struggling with my DC. Know what made it even more hellish? Being iced out and avoided by the entire community. It was a really traumatic time in my life (kids ended up having multiple disabilities) and the community basically blaming me for the way my kid was wired put it over the edge. You can engage with the parents without involving their children, especially at this age.
Your kid with “disabilities” makes everyone miserable. When my kid comes home with yet another story about their classroom being evacuated because your kid threw a violent tantrum…honestly you are lucky the other parents DONT talk to you. I have some choice words for the parents of these little monsters but I just keep it moving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents really aren’t that nice behind closed doors. Kids who are truly a-holes learn that at home first.
Agree 100%. The parents who act nice but do things like cut the carpool line are not actually nice and are raising their kids to be entitled jerks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t hang out with them. Say hello and keep walking.
This is so horrible. I went through a period where I was struggling with my DC. Know what made it even more hellish? Being iced out and avoided by the entire community. It was a really traumatic time in my life (kids ended up having multiple disabilities) and the community basically blaming me for the way my kid was wired put it over the edge. You can engage with the parents without involving their children, especially at this age.
Anonymous wrote:The parents really aren’t that nice behind closed doors. Kids who are truly a-holes learn that at home first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents really aren’t that nice behind closed doors. Kids who are truly a-holes learn that at home first.
Only one way for you to “know” this.
By spending enough time with the parents over many years that I’ve heard several comments slip out of their mouth when their guards were down. The more
you get to know people…
Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen some super-nice parents that were basically too nice and didn’t discipline their kids and ended up with little terrors. It definitely happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would want to know.
The fear of your reaction will make most people not tell you. I wouldn't. Most parents will defensively and instinctively push back and stand up for their kid.
I don’t know, a year or two ago one of my kids did something quite nasty to another kid whose mom told me. We had some serious conversations with the kid, kid felt ashamed and apologized (sincerely as far as I could tell), we continue to talk about how we treat other people, and now those two kids are friendly if not close. I appreciated being told because it meant that I could help my child improve their behavior. They’re learning and growing, they will do stupid and thoughtless things, it’s the parents’ job to help them grow up well, and is easier to do that if you have more context!
If this is true, you are a unicorn.
Most parents think they are unicorns, but aren't.
Well, I was pretty upset! How could my child do such a thing, where did I go wrong as a parent, surely the other kid was partially wrong too…but at the end of the day it was objectively inappropriate behavior no matter the provocation. I think I would have been a lot more defensive if it had seemed like my kid did it to upset the other kid as opposed to trying to seem funny/cool to third parties (although of course it’s just as hurtful either way) because “my kid is being thoughtless” is an easier pill to swallow than “my kid is being mean on purpose,” but I hope that I’d pull myself together either way and deal with my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents really aren’t that nice behind closed doors. Kids who are truly a-holes learn that at home first.
Only one way for you to “know” this.