Anonymous wrote:I’m strict. I have very polite A student middle schoolers. Rolling eyes and walking away is an absolute no go. It’s absolutely rude and not to be tolerated. How would you feel if your husband did this? Don’t care your age, nobody in my house is allowed to act like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The eye rolls and huffs are communicating something. If you use empathy to lean into what he’s feeling and out words to it, he will learn to communicate. How much do you model using “I feel” statements in your communication?
I feel irritated that making basic good behavior subject to negotiation from a young age inevitably results in adults who think that eye-rolling in front of the boss is an acceptable form dissent at work on this forum.
I feel sad when adults with a similar world view on the acceptability of eyerolling at work suggest that a supervisor who does not tolerate over-indulgent behavior deserves to be sabotaged.
I feel frustrated that their parents probably caved into manipulative behaviors, and feel regretful that they now have trouble coping with anything disagreeable to them.
I feel annoyed that when the role between parent and friend is blurred growing up, a similar misunderstanding happens at work.
Empathy and communication are important, but so are clear expectations, consequences, and teaching kids how to manage disappointment and frustration so they don't become insufferable adults.
If I rolled my eyes at my boss, I'd be fired. And I'd deserve it.
Good riddance, anyone who thinks they should be fired over an eye roll clearly has issues.
I work in a professional setting, where we are expected to discuss issues and disagreements using words. I'm not sure how they run things at the Dunkin Donuts you work at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If someone rolls their eyes at work they are a. 16 or b. act like a 16 year old. Nobody wants to work with either of these!
Sure. But do you act differently at home than at work? Do you keep yourself together 100% of the time? When you slip up, do your spouse and kids hound you?
I think you can have high standards and be realistic about the capabilities of your child. Temperament definitely plays a role in how easily a kid can keep it together at home.
Anonymous wrote:If someone rolls their eyes at work they are a. 16 or b. act like a 16 year old. Nobody wants to work with either of these!