Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The agency should drop you. OP, this is a serious matter and you need to treat it as serious, not a " boys will be boys" incident.
I am not- and what would you suggest is a correct punishment?
Clearly this poster has no idea of typical child behavior at this age. It is not boys will be boys. My 6 year old daughter is obsessed with boobs. It is not a boy thing
I wouldn't blame the ap but she clearly doesn't understand what she is doing.
What kind of punishment does she want you to give.
This would raise very serious rd flags to me about your ap abilities and relationship with your son. It is rather bizarre actually. Your sons actions were not sexual. All this discussing and punishment is going to make it worse. Experts say to ignore it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two boys and they never touched the genetials or breasts of any woman. This is not normal behavior.
Then you must not have breast fed as I have 3 boys and 1 girl and they all play around talking about their privates. It's normal behavior as I am also a physician. Clearly, you cannot even spell "genitals" so it does not surprise me in the slightest that you would know normal behavior of children.
Anonymous wrote:I have two boys and they never touched the genetials or breasts of any woman. This is not normal behavior.
Anonymous wrote:I have two boys and they never touched the genetials or breasts of any woman. This is not normal behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The agency should drop you. OP, this is a serious matter and you need to treat it as serious, not a " boys will be boys" incident.
I am not- and what would you suggest is a correct punishment?
Anonymous wrote:Your au pair sounds very immature.
FWIW, my 6 year old grabbed my friend's au pair's breast (and never my au pair or mine for that matter.) It was totally innocent. He was curious because she's very well endowed but had no idea it was off-limits and has no concept of it being something sexual. We just told him that it's a private part and not to do that again, and when we was out of earshot we all laughed. I apologized to my friend's au pair who just sort of smirked and shrugged and laughed herself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all keep focussing on the kid and that's the problem. If your friend/daughter/mother told you she'd been violated in a way that upset her, would you call her immature and expect her to just get over it? Yes he's a child and he made a mistake, but her response to it really shouldn't be up for judgement. If she won't be able to move on quickly, rematch, but don't blame her. Your son did this, not her. There are consequences to your actions, whether you intended them or not, and he should learn that too.
Im not calling her immature-I am just wondering what I can do...I keep talking to her, asking what she thinks, but she is waiting to see how I punish him.
I didn't mean you OP. She's been called immature on this thread. There may not be anything more that you can do. Support her, don't blame her, but obviously if she can't figure out how to move past it, rematch is the best answer. Did you have him apologize?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all keep focussing on the kid and that's the problem. If your friend/daughter/mother told you she'd been violated in a way that upset her, would you call her immature and expect her to just get over it? Yes he's a child and he made a mistake, but her response to it really shouldn't be up for judgement. If she won't be able to move on quickly, rematch, but don't blame her. Your son did this, not her. There are consequences to your actions, whether you intended them or not, and he should learn that too.
Im not calling her immature-I am just wondering what I can do...I keep talking to her, asking what she thinks, but she is waiting to see how I punish him.
Anonymous wrote:You all keep focussing on the kid and that's the problem. If your friend/daughter/mother told you she'd been violated in a way that upset her, would you call her immature and expect her to just get over it? Yes he's a child and he made a mistake, but her response to it really shouldn't be up for judgement. If she won't be able to move on quickly, rematch, but don't blame her. Your son did this, not her. There are consequences to your actions, whether you intended them or not, and he should learn that too.
Anonymous wrote:Your au pair sounds very immature.
FWIW, my 6 year old grabbed my friend's au pair's breast (and never my au pair or mine for that matter.) It was totally innocent. He was curious because she's very well endowed but had no idea it was off-limits and has no concept of it being something sexual. We just told him that it's a private part and not to do that again, and when we was out of earshot we all laughed. I apologized to my friend's au pair who just sort of smirked and shrugged and laughed herself.