Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If op is this sensitive now, i feel for the dh who has to support her through menopause
I feel bad for your DH because you are a bitch
Anonymous wrote:If op is this sensitive now, i feel for the dh who has to support her through menopause
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wow you are overreacting OP. Put a monitor on your own kid for a day to hear what your DC might be saying through the day. Kids this age basically are repeating what they hear others saying and are also showing off for their friends.
Just reinforce to your own kid to not say things that hurt other people's feelings, ignore when other people say something ridiculous and mean when they are just trying to show off, and if you really want go in and talk with the teacher about advice/support for kind words in the classroom.
Her daughter is 5. Kids that age do not go around and try and repeat each other by saying mean things to one another. I am curious what schools your kids go to that you think this is the normal behavior of K students day in and day out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is why you send your kids to preschool. Otherwise they will end up in kindergarten and not know how to spell and have poor social skills. Maybe you can spend some time working with her on both. There are other ways to deal with another child saying something you don't like besides tattling to your mom.
The majority of kids do go to pre-school but, they can also have learning disabilities that make reading ( dyslexia anyone?) or math disabilities that make school work very challenging. That does not mean they are not smart. It is cruel for kids to point this fact out even for five years old. But, we as parents need to step in and teach kids to mind their own business. Who cares if Timmy is in the lower math and Sarah is not reading chapter books? They might be amazing artists or play the piano.
I get it, op as my kids have been made fun of in school. However, in many cases ( not all) mean kids do turn into mean adults and I teach them to rise above mean comments. Doesn't mean it won't hurt but, if the bullies were so confident than they wouldn't put others down. I teach them that mean kids feel inferior at a deep level. Otherwise, if you are on top why would you make those comments?
Also, many preschools don't overtly teach academics - just pre-reading skills and pre-math skills. I would never assume most kids going to K already know how to read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you moms are honestly just horrendous. The ones saying this 5yr old needs to get a backbone and get over it. The OP didn't say she wasn't going to teach her that. She didn't say she was at home crying about it. She didn't say she was going to run into the school and point fingers at the kid. She is venting a mean kid said something mean and unnecessary. And you all are just throwing insults after insults at each other.
And we now see where these kids get this type of behavior and attitude from.
All of you are disgusting.
Uh... maybe check the mirror?
Anonymous wrote:wow you are overreacting OP. Put a monitor on your own kid for a day to hear what your DC might be saying through the day. Kids this age basically are repeating what they hear others saying and are also showing off for their friends.
Just reinforce to your own kid to not say things that hurt other people's feelings, ignore when other people say something ridiculous and mean when they are just trying to show off, and if you really want go in and talk with the teacher about advice/support for kind words in the classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well here is the good news op. When you catch your child saying something mean to another- and you will- you can remind her of this incident and how she felt.
OP here. I know this is hard for some of you to believe. But some kids just don't think like that. My DD (and no she is not my first child) is far from perfect. She is sensitive and shy and and is reluctant to do things independently - all things we are working on - but it would just never occur to her to tease or be mean to another child. And I think that is why it was so hard for her to understand why another child would say something like that. This same little boy finishes all of his worksheets really quickly and announces to his tablemates "I'm finished. I win!" every day. Something is up with the way this kid is being parented. You will not convince me otherwise.
Of course we won't convince you, FTM of a girl. Have a second kid, a boy, and then report back.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well here is the good news op. When you catch your child saying something mean to another- and you will- you can remind her of this incident and how she felt.
OP here. I know this is hard for some of you to believe. But some kids just don't think like that. My DD (and no she is not my first child) is far from perfect. She is sensitive and shy and and is reluctant to do things independently - all things we are working on - but it would just never occur to her to tease or be mean to another child. And I think that is why it was so hard for her to understand why another child would say something like that. This same little boy finishes all of his worksheets really quickly and announces to his tablemates "I'm finished. I win!" every day. Something is up with the way this kid is being parented. You will not convince me otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:My 5 year old came home sad today because a boy who sits at her table told her and another girl at her table their word study (spelling) pages are for "babies." Obviously he is in a harder group.
She and I talked about it and she is fine, but what a little shit. I would be mortified if my kid sold this to another child.