
How do you handle things like that without losing your temper?
Moderator: Andrew
Maui Tom wrote:be yourself.....everyone has their boiling point...she just brought out yours....
Rick wrote:I will say though that she has been a really good kid.
Saint John wrote:Rick wrote:I will say though that she has been a really good kid.
Tell her that ... and then ask why she's acting the way she's acting. Being a teenager is a motherfucker and maybe she's going through something related to that that you don't know about. Kids want to know you care about them and their problems. That, more than any amount of yelling, will get her to open up and (probably) change the way she's acting.
DrFU wrote:One thing that seem to get through to my guys was telling them that we all catch enough shit from people in the outside world that the family had to be our safe zone. So no abuse and nastiness was allowed -- from the boys to each other , kids to parents, or parents to kids. They could express all the bad feeling they wanted, but it had to be said in a reasonable way. This also had the side effect of improving their vocabularies as they had to find new words to get their point across.
S2M wrote:I'm a firm believer that you can not make a kid(person) do anything that they do not want to do....no matter what you take away, threaten...etc. Unless the kid gets it, you are SOL. As far as a teenager being under a lot of pressure...I'm not 100% sold on that. I was a teenager, and I did just fine. We grew up relatively poor, so I knew better than to ask for stuf....I never had the things that other kids had, never thought that I had to have them, and never cared...
I'm going through that mouthy stage with my son right now. He's 12 1/2 and thinks he's Charlie Sheen....I specifically heard the first What the Fuck!, and Douche today....I'm SOOOO proud.... And i don't believe in hitting, which forces me to be creative. I'm a weekend warrior, so there's only so much I can do....mother's not on the same page when it comes to discipline, or parenting. So i took away his allowance, made him do the chores anyway, and stormed into the room, ripped the headphones off his head - and ripped the Xbox cables out of the unit, and kept that incredulous looking look on my face all afternoon.....he came out of the room roughly 3 hours later and told me he was going in the shower, and I haven't heard a peep since....he didn't apologize, but what am I to do?![]()
This is a phase I never went through....
Don wrote:I don't go for the public embarrassment part. It might gratify the parent in having the upper hand but in the eyes of someone looking from the outside, it looks like you have gone down to your kids level when you do that and kids never forget it either, though they may pretend to. I explained to my kid why I myself cuss sometimes but why it's never at people. I gave him the whole limited vocabuary thing where we curse because we can't think of the proper way to say something so we cheat and go the ignorant route by cussing. I explained when you don't cuss you have longer control of the situation . When you cuss, you get everyone's attention but you lose it after 30 seconds because the cursing signifies that you're not quite smart enough to say something constructive to express your point so why should anyone listen to you.
My kid got it and while he still cussed when he played a game or something, he stopped directing it at people as a response for when was upset. Now he's 21, he has his own life but that lesson seems to have stuck with him, for the most part.
StevePerryHair wrote:DrFU wrote:One thing that seem to get through to my guys was telling them that we all catch enough shit from people in the outside world that the family had to be our safe zone. So no abuse and nastiness was allowed -- from the boys to each other , kids to parents, or parents to kids. They could express all the bad feeling they wanted, but it had to be said in a reasonable way. This also had the side effect of improving their vocabularies as they had to find new words to get their point across.
That's good advice Linda!! I will try that and see what happens. I have to say though, raising one boy and 2 girls, they are two different animals. My son is very respectful. Rarely argues. Backs down right away if I start to get upset with him. And he more likes to get me worked up in different ways. It's a different frustration with him for me than the girls. Women are verbal, and it starts in the teen years I believe!! I can see why people say boys are easier!!!But I do love having girls too. It's just a challenge though!
Saint John wrote:Rick wrote:I will say though that she has been a really good kid.
Tell her that ... and then ask why she's acting the way she's acting. Being a teenager is a motherfucker and maybe she's going through something related to that that you don't know about. Kids want to know you care about them and their problems. That, more than any amount of yelling, will get her to open up and (probably) change the way she's acting.
DrFU wrote:One thing that seem to get through to my guys was telling them that we all catch enough shit from people in the outside world that the family had to be our safe zone. So no abuse and nastiness was allowed -- from the boys to each other , kids to parents, or parents to kids. They could express all the bad feeling they wanted, but it had to be said in a reasonable way. This also had the side effect of improving their vocabularies as they had to find new words to get their point across.
S2M wrote:I'm a firm believer that you can not make a kid(person) do anything that they do not want to do....no matter what you take away, threaten...etc. Unless the kid gets it, you are SOL. As far as a teenager being under a lot of pressure...I'm not 100% sold on that. I was a teenager, and I did just fine. We grew up relatively poor, so I knew better than to ask for stuf....I never had the things that other kids had, never thought that I had to have them, and never cared...
I'm going through that mouthy stage with my son right now. He's 12 1/2 and thinks he's Charlie Sheen....I specifically heard the first What the Fuck!, and Douche today....I'm SOOOO proud.... And i don't believe in hitting, which forces me to be creative. I'm a weekend warrior, so there's only so much I can do....mother's not on the same page when it comes to discipline, or parenting. So i took away his allowance, made him do the chores anyway, and stormed into the room, ripped the headphones off his head - and ripped the Xbox cables out of the unit, and kept that incredulous looking look on my face all afternoon.....he came out of the room roughly 3 hours later and told me he was going in the shower, and I haven't heard a peep since....he didn't apologize, but what am I to do?![]()
This is a phase I never went through....
StevePerryHair wrote:Don wrote:I don't go for the public embarrassment part. It might gratify the parent in having the upper hand but in the eyes of someone looking from the outside, it looks like you have gone down to your kids level when you do that and kids never forget it either, though they may pretend to. I explained to my kid why I myself cuss sometimes but why it's never at people. I gave him the whole limited vocabuary thing where we curse because we can't think of the proper way to say something so we cheat and go the ignorant route by cussing. I explained when you don't cuss you have longer control of the situation . When you cuss, you get everyone's attention but you lose it after 30 seconds because the cursing signifies that you're not quite smart enough to say something constructive to express your point so why should anyone listen to you.
My kid got it and while he still cussed when he played a game or something, he stopped directing it at people as a response for when was upset. Now he's 21, he has his own life but that lesson seems to have stuck with him, for the most part.
My kids and I NEVER cuss at each other. That's not the disrespect level we are at. And I honestly don't care what some stranger from the outside thinks watching or how I look.![]()
I just want her to shut her mouth until we can have a private discussion. And that works. I don't make some big scene. And I don't yell. I just dont' stop talking because SHE tells me to. What kind of mom do I look like if she says "just stop talking mom" when I am trying to reasonably discuss her issue with her, and then I do.
You had a son. Do you know many women? Do you know too many who will easily shut up when they aren't happy?Girls and boys are not the same.
Angel wrote:I hate it when I agree with you because most of the time I think you're a total ass.But, this is exactly right.
DrFU wrote:StevePerryHair wrote:DrFU wrote:One thing that seem to get through to my guys was telling them that we all catch enough shit from people in the outside world that the family had to be our safe zone. So no abuse and nastiness was allowed -- from the boys to each other , kids to parents, or parents to kids. They could express all the bad feeling they wanted, but it had to be said in a reasonable way. This also had the side effect of improving their vocabularies as they had to find new words to get their point across.
That's good advice Linda!! I will try that and see what happens. I have to say though, raising one boy and 2 girls, they are two different animals. My son is very respectful. Rarely argues. Backs down right away if I start to get upset with him. And he more likes to get me worked up in different ways. It's a different frustration with him for me than the girls. Women are verbal, and it starts in the teen years I believe!! I can see why people say boys are easier!!!But I do love having girls too. It's just a challenge though!
I was a junior high assistant principal. Responsible for discipline for 700 teenagers. I still have nightmares about the girls.But the same principle worked eventually on most of them. You just have to let them know they cannot talk to you disrespectfully, period. And enforce it every single time with every single kid. They have exaggerated sense of justice at
that age. They don't care if you nail them to the wall as long as everyone who committed the same infraction also gets nailed to the wall at the exact same height with the exact same number of nails for the exact same length of time.
Don wrote:StevePerryHair wrote:Don wrote:I don't go for the public embarrassment part. It might gratify the parent in having the upper hand but in the eyes of someone looking from the outside, it looks like you have gone down to your kids level when you do that and kids never forget it either, though they may pretend to. I explained to my kid why I myself cuss sometimes but why it's never at people. I gave him the whole limited vocabuary thing where we curse because we can't think of the proper way to say something so we cheat and go the ignorant route by cussing. I explained when you don't cuss you have longer control of the situation . When you cuss, you get everyone's attention but you lose it after 30 seconds because the cursing signifies that you're not quite smart enough to say something constructive to express your point so why should anyone listen to you.
My kid got it and while he still cussed when he played a game or something, he stopped directing it at people as a response for when was upset. Now he's 21, he has his own life but that lesson seems to have stuck with him, for the most part.
My kids and I NEVER cuss at each other. That's not the disrespect level we are at. And I honestly don't care what some stranger from the outside thinks watching or how I look.![]()
I just want her to shut her mouth until we can have a private discussion. And that works. I don't make some big scene. And I don't yell. I just dont' stop talking because SHE tells me to. What kind of mom do I look like if she says "just stop talking mom" when I am trying to reasonably discuss her issue with her, and then I do.
You had a son. Do you know many women? Do you know too many who will easily shut up when they aren't happy?Girls and boys are not the same.
To each his own. I don't believe in public embarrassment. I was brought up where if you saw someone doing that, if they weren't a minority, they were labeled as white trash. I'm not calling you that , just explaining my own upbringing and why I don't do that. My kid has never cussed at me but I heard him cussing about classmates and teachers and that's why I had to correct that foremost as a safety measure more than etiquette before he pulled it with some one who might REALLY take offense and respond in a way that might lead to violence or something of that nature.
StevePerryHair wrote:DrFU wrote:StevePerryHair wrote:
It's so hard though, because they are SO respectful at school, with other parents, with their friends.... they are perfect!! You don't know the complements I get!! Sometimes I wonder if all that "perfection" just wears them out, and when they get home, it's just too hard to keep up the act!! And it comes out in little ways like anger. They ARE sweet kids. NO ONE'S KIDS are perfect 24/7. No way I believe that. But there are just little things that trigger outbursts. But then I think about us as adults. You know, if I have a bad day, I will snap unnecessarily at those closest to me too. It's human nature. And I am very sorry when I realize I've done that. It's why I am proud of my daughter for also feeling that remorse. Realizing she needs to do better and trying. I don't deal with it on a daily basis, thank God!!
Rick wrote:How do you handle things like that without losing your temper?
DrFU wrote:StevePerryHair wrote:DrFU wrote:StevePerryHair wrote:
It's so hard though, because they are SO respectful at school, with other parents, with their friends.... they are perfect!! You don't know the complements I get!! Sometimes I wonder if all that "perfection" just wears them out, and when they get home, it's just too hard to keep up the act!! And it comes out in little ways like anger. They ARE sweet kids. NO ONE'S KIDS are perfect 24/7. No way I believe that. But there are just little things that trigger outbursts. But then I think about us as adults. You know, if I have a bad day, I will snap unnecessarily at those closest to me too. It's human nature. And I am very sorry when I realize I've done that. It's why I am proud of my daughter for also feeling that remorse. Realizing she needs to do better and trying. I don't deal with it on a daily basis, thank God!!
That's a great point -- no one gets it perfect all the time. I'll never forget the day the guys came in the door after school with the oldest , Steve , announcing, "Scott told the coach to fuck himself." Rut row.
DrFU wrote:StevePerryHair wrote:
It's so hard though, because they are SO respectful at school, with other parents, with their friends.... they are perfect!! You don't know the complements I get!! Sometimes I wonder if all that "perfection" just wears them out, and when they get home, it's just too hard to keep up the act!! And it comes out in little ways like anger. They ARE sweet kids. NO ONE'S KIDS are perfect 24/7. No way I believe that. But there are just little things that trigger outbursts. But then I think about us as adults. You know, if I have a bad day, I will snap unnecessarily at those closest to me too. It's human nature. And I am very sorry when I realize I've done that. It's why I am proud of my daughter for also feeling that remorse. Realizing she needs to do better and trying. I don't deal with it on a daily basis, thank God!!
That's a great point -- no one gets it perfect all the time. I'll never forget the day the guys came in the door after school with the oldest , Steve , announcing, "Scott told the coach to fuck himself." Rut row.
Andrew wrote:Rick wrote:How do you handle things like that without losing your temper?
I don't. I have no patience whatsoever!
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