Anonymous wrote:Tell the parents not to argue in front of the kid.
Yes. Tell them. That would help the kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor little kid.
Be a positive and reliable force in her life. Be more predictable and on schedule than usual. Give more hugs and physical affection and tell her more than usual what a great kid she is. You may be the only stable thing she has right now. Seriously, be as predictable as the moon.
9.59 here. I agree with PP in theory (tell her you love her and how wonderful she is), but use terms that tell her exactly what you mean. Instead of saying she's great, she's kind, loving, friendly, etc. Her world is coming apart, so she needs concrete examples, not generalities and platitudes.
Thank you! Great advice!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(the mother told me that she came home from a birthday party with a goody bag that had two pieces of candy in it and my charge told her parents that each would get one piece of candy as a reward if they didn't fight)
That’s so sad! I can’t imagine how I would handle this with my own charge. It’s heart-breaking just reading about your situation.
It’s so ridiculous that the parents can’t be bothered to make sure their child is not within earshot when they argue. If they really can’t control themselves, they need to severely limit their time together as a family. That poor baby.
Are they living together still?
No, the father is living elsewhere but comes over several nights a week and on weekends
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor little kid.
Be a positive and reliable force in her life. Be more predictable and on schedule than usual. Give more hugs and physical affection and tell her more than usual what a great kid she is. You may be the only stable thing she has right now. Seriously, be as predictable as the moon.
9.59 here. I agree with PP in theory (tell her you love her and how wonderful she is), but use terms that tell her exactly what you mean. Instead of saying she's great, she's kind, loving, friendly, etc. Her world is coming apart, so she needs concrete examples, not generalities and platitudes.
Anonymous wrote:Poor little kid.
Be a positive and reliable force in her life. Be more predictable and on schedule than usual. Give more hugs and physical affection and tell her more than usual what a great kid she is. You may be the only stable thing she has right now. Seriously, be as predictable as the moon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(the mother told me that she came home from a birthday party with a goody bag that had two pieces of candy in it and my charge told her parents that each would get one piece of candy as a reward if they didn't fight)
That’s so sad! I can’t imagine how I would handle this with my own charge. It’s heart-breaking just reading about your situation.
It’s so ridiculous that the parents can’t be bothered to make sure their child is not within earshot when they argue. If they really can’t control themselves, they need to severely limit their time together as a family. That poor baby.
Are they living together still?
Anonymous wrote:(the mother told me that she came home from a birthday party with a goody bag that had two pieces of candy in it and my charge told her parents that each would get one piece of candy as a reward if they didn't fight)
Anonymous wrote:Let her talk to you. Don’t censor what she says, but try to explain that they still love her. Use language you already use, like bad choices don’t make a kid bad, mean words don’t make a family bad.
Also, let the parents know that she is upset when they fight in front of her. Either they need to present a calm front when together or she needs to be with one at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Not your job or problem. They need to do this and to stop the fighting in front of her.