In a 2022 survey, the Pew Research Center found about two-thirds of American parents with kids younger than 18 (66%) say it's extremely important to them that their little ones grow up to be honest and ethical adults. About half (48%) say the same about their children being hardworking, while about four in ten want their children to become the kind of people who are accepting of those who are different from them (42%) and who help others in need (40%).
However, sometimes life gets in the way of even the best intentions and leaves us there to pick up the pieces. A few days ago, Reddit user u/hurricanehershel made a post on the platform, asking: "Parents who tried their best to raise their kids to be good humans but they turned out to be jerks, what do you wish you did differently?" The replies quickly started pouring in, so we thought it would be interesting to explore parental regret a little deeper and collected the most popular ones.
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I (male) was sexually assaulted by an older boy when I was a child, my parents knew, but didn’t want to admit that happened.
My life was a chaotic mess until I addressed it myself, and my sexual life was reckless, harmful, and dangerous to myself, and my partners, because I didn’t know what a healthy relationship was (I was hyper sexual for decades).
My mom admitted she knew they should have gotten me therapy (as well as get the kid arrested).
I absolutely *hated* authority figures for a long, long, long time, because I was betrayed on that level, and it started a burning resentment and anger, and I subconsciously f****d my life up to get back at them, without realizing that’s what I was doing.
Parents, if something traumatic happens to your child, get them help.
I don’t want to hear the money excuse.
You f*****g go without, you eat ramen, you get a second job, whatever you have to do.
But please, don’t teach your kid that they can’t trust anyone in positions of authority.
You’re dooming them to a life of anger, pain, depression, resentment, emotional shutdown, and in my case, alcoholism and violence.
Save them from themselves.
Don’t let them follow my path, I barely made it out alive and sane.
Keep them the f**k away from social media. My oldest had access way too early, and it turned them into an absolute absurdity of a teenager. They are about to be 18 and I did not make that mistake with my other children. Zero access to social media. Turns out that without that influence, they model their behavior after their parents and real life people instead of b******t influencers on insta/tiktok/etc...
Social Media is poison for children and teens. Keep them away from it at all costs.
Be very careful WHO you have kids with. If I could do it all over again, I would have chosen better. They ended up with 1 responsible parent who was completely overwhelmed trying to do the job of 2 people.
Before I was born my parents had four kids between them from their respective first marriages. Watching my parents struggle to relate to my older siblings in *exactly * the same ways they struggled to interact with their ex spouses made me a very healthy believer in the idea that “only have kids if you are 100% certain you want to live with the personality traits of your partner even after you divorce them”
You don't have to win every power struggle.
I don't have jerk kids. But I do think I've learned a lot from having 4 very different kids, and I think too many parents 1. Think the same strategies work for all kids (ie, rule-consequence-behavior falls in line, rinse and repeat) and 2. Focus on the behavior rather than the cause.
If you have a kid who doesn't respond to your parenting style/philosophy, you should rethink your approach. It's not all the kid's fault.
Some kids will burn their lives to the ground to make a point. I have one like that. For too long, it was a vicious cycle of
* kid acts out
* I punish
* kid is angry, acts out more
* I punish harder
* kid is angrier, acts out even more
* I punish even harder
and on and on and on and on. Something needs to break the cycle.
For instance, if your kid is challenging your authority, it's usually a bid for more independence. They're trying to be more mature, and they want your adult respect. You don't have to excuse the bad behavior; consequences are OK. But you ALSO have to look for ways to help your kid get that need met.
You don't have to tie it to the actual incident, so it doesn't look like a reward. Give them more responsibility for themselves.
* Let him walk to school alone if he doesn't get to do that.
* Quit bugging him so much about what he does with his free time, even if you think he should be "getting more fresh air."
* Look for any opportunity to let him choose something. "We're going to do something as a family on Sunday. You can choose what we do." or where we eat or whatever.
* Don't tell him WHEN he has to do his chores. Let him set his Saturday schedule: "I need you to mow the lawn and do the dishes today. You can do it any time between now and 6 p.m."
If you address the cause of the behavior, it's going to do way more to correct a bad behavior, and you'll also get more respect from your kid.
If you insist on winning every power struggle, your kid is going to see everything as a fight.
EDIT: I need to give my wife credit for helping me understand this over the years. She's not only a great mom and wife, she's also a really good therapist. She's gained a lot of perspective working with other kids and parents and working on those relationships.
I really like these suggestions on how to give a child more independence while at the same time making sure they’re behaving appropriately. This is parenting done right
*Don’t try to make introverted kids into extroverted kids.”
I’m an extrovert and so are my parents. But all 3 of my children were introverts, which I didn’t realize until they were all adults.
I can whiz into any social setting late or disheveled and then humor my way out of feeling shame or embarrassment, but what I realize now is that such behavior was sorta traumatizing my little introverts, who preferred to blend in with walls.
I think they are somewhat bitter about me not fully understanding them. I thought everyone desired to be a part of big exciting experiences and to ambitiously network for connection and opportunity.
I’ve learned that often parents put pressure on their kids to act as an extrovert. For example, a younger friend of mine has 3 girls, and one of them is extremely shy. At a birthday party, all of the children played “ring around the rosies” and other group games.
The shy one refused to join and fortunately her mother didn’t force her. But I’ve witnessed many parents getting angry, embarrassed or even threatening when a child is not comfortable jumping right in to such activities.
The reason she didn’t force her was because, as a mother of 3 adult introverts, I had told her that if I had it to do over again, I would want to be more aware of my children’s personality types, and I would try to avoid assuming that they would want what I wanted more of as a child.
I hope this makes sense.
Pay attention to mental health issues from a very young age.
I wish I knew that some grandparents shouldn’t be allowed to have a relationship with a vulnerable, easily manipulated child. I wish I knew it was okay to cut people out of your life.
In my experience most jerk kids come from jerk parents.
That being said, kids can easily become jerks when they have no consequences for their actions. Not just as a toddler but throughout childhood.
Or when the consequences don't fit the issue on hand. If they're too unrelated, the kid won't understand why their behaviour is not ok. For example taking the kids door away because they didn't do the dishes would be harmful and cruel, they deserve their privacy. But if your teenager is trying out boundaries and intentionally slams their door to wake up the whole house and gleefully bully their family, a curtain it will be until they learnt their lesson and promise to not slam the door.
I deeply regret not reading to them more. I have cried as an adult thinking about this dumb, stupid mistake when I think about how neither of them read books and the ways reading might have sparked character growth.
When I was a kid my dad read to me at bedtime, and my mum gave me copies of her favourite childhood books. It was absolutely what first got me into reading and eventually writing. Prepare for possible sniffles: one series my dad used to read me were the "Mog" books by Judith Kerr. Decades later I found out there was a new and apparently final book in the series called "Goodbye Mog", in which the grumpy old cat finally passes away. I bought a copy, invited Dad to come and sit with me in the garden, and said "Read it to me."
Don't praise kids for being smart, even if they are. If you do this, the first time they find something academically challenging, they might think they are not smart anymore, or that you lied and they were never smart in the first place.
Praise them for their willingness to try, to problem solve, and to persevere.
My kid isn't a jerk, but he is an underachiever who lacks confidence. I put too much emphasis on his intelligence and not enough on hard work.
Not me, but my parents have discussed what they wished they had done differently for my brother in order to prevent him from becoming a violent, homeless, drug addicted snot ball of a person.
They wish they had sent him to therapy before problems ever started, and that they had reacted quicker and sent him sooner when they did. They wish they hadn’t yelled so much at all of us. That they had been more patient and forgiving of our mistakes. They wish a lot.
I worked with youth for a while in a poorer rural part of America and in my anecdotal experience there are two types of kids that can turn into bad humans.
One, they've just had tough lives and no good role models. If you get to know them you realize they are just normal kids that have never been given the tools, opportunity, or encouragement to act any different. If noone figures out how to intervene it becomes a pattern of life for them that spirals out of control.
Two, kids that never suffer the consequences of their actions. They tend to have really "nice" caregivers who have a knack for getting thier kids out of trouble. When I say they don't suffer consequences I mean literally. Their parents do their homework, their parents lie for them, thier parents don't ever tell them "no". Their caregivers also don't supervise them but whenever anything happens they are easily manipulated by thier child and take whatever their child says as gospel truth without question. And although the parents don't supervise their children they seem all too willing to give them everything thier child asks for (within the confines of their economic class). The caregivers are somehow both emotionally neglectful but also always there to help their child out of a jam. In a way that feels like they want to be manipulated by their child.
Kids in the first category will do something bad and you go, "how could they be so stupid?" When kids in the second category do something bad your reaction is, "it's only a matter of time before they kill someone."
I knew a lot of young adults that got in trouble with the law, but it was only people from category two that got tried for murder and manslaughter.
Generally speaking
If you try to teach your kid something and NOT BE THE example, you might as well not have wasted your time.
They say everyone makes the best decision at the time.
The path to forgiveness.
If I look back at raising my M23 F21 kids, I think I would have been less harsh on mistakes & rule-breaking.
All it did was encourage subversion & distrust.
Good luck.
A child won't grow up a good and kind person if he's taught to do good deeds and not misbehave only for fear of punishment. He may grow up a law-abiding citizen, but there's a difference, you don't rob a man in the street because that's morally wrong or you don't rob a man in the street because it is illegal.
I have one child, the youngest, who I'm starting to worry about. He's tall, athletic, attractive and very charismatic. I feel like it's a constant battle between teaching him respect and humility and the worship he gets at school. At his age he's not prepared to deal with all these piers who want his attention, tell him how great he is, and the girls lining up to talk to him.
Yeah, don't we all wish we had this problem as teens. Anyway, it's a struggle. He's gotten cocky and thinks life will just keep on treating him like a king. And maybe it will - he's got the type of personality that makes people want him around. But he needs to treat others with the same respect he expects for himself. Confidence is good but it needs to be combined with kindness. Our other children are very level headed and what we feel are good people. I hope we get to properly tech this to our youngest and that he takes it to heart and chooses to be a good person.
A lot.
I wish I’d insisted on eating dinner as a family every day.
I wish I’d found more things to do with them that we each enjoyed.
I wish I’d taken them backpacking more often at an earlier age to expose them to nature, unplug them from the world, and teach them how good it feels to tackle a big challenge with no external help.
I wish I’d been more patient and playful.
And doing things together as a family means making sure it's an activity that isn't just geared towards adults. And if you choose that, don't get mad when your adhd child can't hold still or "behave" while looking at a big slab of marble or going to a shítty museum they've already been forced to go to several times before.
I have raised three kids, none of them jerks. All good, kind productive people. However, one of my kids was a difficult, extremely strong-willed child. I kept getting caught in power struggles with this child, which was leading nowhere and resulting in us fighting all the time. I felt critical and negative, which I hated. I decided to start "catching the child being good." Every time I saw the child behaving or being helpful or successful at something, I commented on it, thanked them, praised them, etc. It was an immediate turn around. I learned that children simply want your attention. Often times it is the misbehaving child that gets that attention. Start focusing your attention on when they are good and you will see good. It was a game changer for us. This child is now a young adult that graduated from college with good grades and got a great job at a prestigious company. They are doing extremely well in life/career/friendships/romantic relationship. We have a close relationship and I couldn't be prouder of the way they turned out.
I did this when I was a teacher. And I do this now with my not-so-fabulous adult coworkers. It works for everyone, young and old.
Honestly, when the mental problems started she was a legal adult and I wish I would have pushed more for her to seek mental health assistance instead of bringing it up but letting her decide because she was an "adult".
I would give anything to go back and try again. To be more aware of her struggle. To not put it off as she was "finding herself". To not make excuses to justify her struggle. And absolutely not allow her to give in. I never wanted to be overbearing.
I would rather have her stable and her resent me for being overbearing than what has happened to her now.
I regret that every day.
Ugh. We talked to our son about everything under the sun. We had an open forum. We talked extensively about money management, sexuality, dating, how to treat other people, drug use, alcoholism and its consequences. He and I also watched a ton of documentaries together on all of the above topics. I have a thing for shows like Underground Inc, Drugs Inc, Broken, and mini series like Dopesick
Once he turned 18 he began to do literally everything we advised against. It's been a hard few years. After losing his gf, loosing his job and spending some time in jail I think he's starting to listen. He's been doing a very good job lately. We love him and we support him despite how hard its been. I feel bad even typing this....
Its really tough to look back and legitimately say what could have been done differently. What I can say to coming parents is:
Don't give up on your kid
Do the best you can
You can't control everything
Addictions are not completely explained right now. But there's a strong hind that it might be a disposition. Some people go through the toughest stuff without so much as a blink, the next one has the happiest life and burns it for drugs. Some are vulnerable, some are not. It's not so easy to find out who's who. But so far we know, knowledge offers some protection, but it's not the final fix it all. But it's still better to educate kids about everything honestly and openly than doing nothing. Whatever their vulnerability is, it gets worse if they don't know what to look out for
The mom of one of the columbine shooters gave a Ted Talk about this.
She wrote a book called A Mother’s Reckoning about all the signs she missed. I think every parent needs to read this book before their kids hit their teenage years.
I should have made them work harder for what they wanted. I just gave it to them and it left them with a sense of entitlement and no will to work hard to get something you want.
For me it’s the opposite lol. I have to work for basically everything, including being allowed to speak to friends-
I wish I had applied more limits. Growing up with a helicopter mom, I tried to be different and ended up giving my daughter too much freedom. It hurt her a lot.
I hope nothing bad happened to her. I wish my parents would have been just a little more hands on with me. I'd walk out of the house without a 'where are you going?' My mom never cared. Granite we lived in a small town and everyone knew who I was, so I was safe. But there were a lot of things with a lot of bad kids I could've been doing and they would've had no idea. They never talked to me about anything in regards to sx, drugs, alcohol, periods, pedophiles. Nothing.
In my opinion, the one defining characteristic of bad parents is being resentful of their own children. Resentful that they took some of their freedom, resentful of their youth, resentful of their opportunities, resentful of their intelligence, resentful of their beauty, resentful of their possessions, resentful of their education, resentful of their accomplishments, resentful of their happiness, etc. I think this is FAR more common than most people realize. These parents may consciously “provide” for their kids while they unconsciously sabotage them. The kids pick up on this and end up aspiring to their parents’ unspoken expectations.
Good parents want their kids to exceed their own achievements and, most importantly, to be happy. Good parents are empathetic to their children. They’re happy when their kids are happy. They’re sad when their kids are sad. Resentful parents don’t really want their kids to be happy unless they credit the parents for their happiness. No achievement belongs to the kids, but every failure does.
And *this * is but one reason out of many that abortion should be legal, safe, and accessible to all who need it. The world does not need any more unwanted children and resentful parents
My mom once told me that she wishes she treated my brother the way she treated me. I was the oldest and her first so she pushed me and gave me high benchmarks, but she realized too late that because she was the youngest and her *baby* she forgave him too easily and let him do anything he wanted.
That by the time she realized that he was an entitled jerk it was too late (his mid-20’s). “It’s my fault he’s a narcissist. I gave him everything he wanted and made him believe he deserved it because he was my precious little boy.”
The only thing you can really do is teach them. They will become who they will become eventually.
Also, when I say “teach them” I don’t just mean to preach things. Lead by *example.* You want to teach them to be kind and generous? Then do those things YOURSELVES. If they watch you serve others in need and get joy from that or love those around you, they may grow up wanting that joy themselves.
You want them to be responsible with alcohol? SHOW them how to be responsible.
You want them to learn from their mistakes? Then when you make a mistake, own up to it and apologize. Show them no one should be too prideful to admit they were wrong and do better the next time.
If you preach kindness and such, but your actions show otherwise, it will come off as hypocritical. Kids know when you are sincere.
Monkey see, monkey do. Humans like all big primates are very good at learning by example
Don’t be overly strict. Love. Love. Love. And love some more. Love doesn’t mean no consequences or discipline but actually the opposite. Let them learn from relatively safe natural consequences.
And then, LOVE them unconditionally and be there for them when the natural consequences happen.
Then let go and realize they are ultimately on their own journey.
We wanted our kids to be happy so I think we coddled and spoiled them. They aren’t ready to function independently in the adult world.
In retrospect, I think learning some hard lessons growing up helps prepare them and is less damaging than learning those lessons as adults.
*Edit: to clarify, they aren’t jerks, just not ready to be adults.
Without more details, this one sounds like the parents are projecting their own emotions on their kids — first by spoiling them and then by deciding “they are not ready” for them to grow up. Who’s not ready? You or the kids?
Not a parent but I’ll answer for my mom, who often mentions mistakes she made with my brother, who SA me repeatedly and later took his own life.
Mistake #1: insisting the oldest kids’ dad have visits with the kids after the divorce, even though he didn’t want to
Mistake #2: allowing the oldest kids’ dad to talk her into stopping visitation with the younger kids’ dad after divorce #2 because “he’s not their real dad so why should he get visitation?” even though dad #2 had bonded with the oldest kids and loved them as his own
Mistake #3: Parentifying the oldest. Parentification is when you use the older children as parental figures for the younger ones. This was very normal when my mom was raising her kids, and still common today, but it leads to A LOT of resentment among the kids, and kids don’t know how to deal with resentment in a healthy way. Most adults don’t even deal with resentment well. In many families, that resentment results in the kids hating and/or abusing each other.
I do not blame my mom one bit; my brother made his own choices and had several opportunities to reconcile things. However, these are things I know she wishes she could have done differently.
I’m literally taking part in parentification right now at this exact moment. I’m taking care of my brother (and his friend)
I wish we hadn’t settled during the custody case and instead fought for full custody of my stepson with limited/supervised visitation with his mom. We thought we were doing the right thing and she ruined him.
Sometimes it's just the nature of the kid. Our daughter is so polite, so well behaved. This is not a humblebrag, because it's just not our doing. It's just natural for her. I always feel awful for parents who work really hard and still have monster offspring. Because we barely have to reprimand her and she does what she's told. We have to do hardly anything and she's just so easy. Life really isnt fair. So don't judge these parents by those kids. It's often not their fault.
Rereading that it really does sound like a humblebrag, it's not meant to. Just wanted to give a different perspective. everyone thinks we are awesome parents, raising a perfect kid. and we don't work any harder than anyone else, we are not wiser, not more compassionate, just more lucky I suppose. We don't deserve the praise, so don't give these people hassle for being bad parents when they often don't deserve it.
Load More Replies...Growing up my entire family always told me that I was in the way. That I was a burden. Anytime I asked for help I was shoved to the side and told to get out of everyone's way. I'm an adult now and I have severe issues with talking to people. I feel like I'm bothering everyone. I don't want to ask for help, so I struggle alone. I can't even go out to eat without feeling like I'm making the cashier mad. I just want to hide in my room and stay away from everyone.
Someone said that to me ONCE and it hurt like hell. I can imagine how hard it is to come back from experiencing that a lot! I hope it helps to know that they were wrong, that you deserved better and that they (probably) did their best but their best was rubbish! I hope you meet some lovely people who treat you the way you deserve, that is with love. Have you thought of getting a dog? They're great as something to love and love you back plus dog park people are generally nice. Finally, I send you a big hug and best wishes.
Load More Replies...Do not ever, ever sweep suspected abuse under the carpet. And never, ever blame the victim. That is how you break a parent child relationship for infinity. No matter what they do to try to do better and have a relationship with the kid as adults... but it can never be as effective as the parent wants. That relationship is damaged, forever
I think a big one is parent the child you have, not the one you want. My husband and I are both really smart and we’re in gifted programs since elementary. Our son is very bright but has his struggles. He has a speech delay, he really struggles to make sentences, and he has an IEP and speech therapy for this. I love and accept him and still push for him to make improvements he’s capable of. My husband is really stuck on him not being gifted and being… I can’t think of a word I’m willing to say but basically looking down on him having special needs. He compares him to himself as a child. He compares him to other kids. I hate it and wish I could help him see the harm that does. My son is a great kid. So sweet and loving, so empathetic. High energy and playful. He listens well (in my opinion and accordingly to teachers), but my husband thinks if he doesn’t do something the first time he asks right away that our son is disrespecting him, even if he didn’t get his attention beforehand.
I think it’s normal to have to get the kid’s attention first and to repeat yourself a few times (not 1000 but like 3 sometimes). My husband thinks it’s because we don’t spank him (I won’t allow it and we agreed on this before we got married/had a child). Instead of trying to find a different way to approach him he just yells and is angry. He’s not acting like the adult. He also thinks he can shame him into things. For example, bed wetting. My son wet the bed every night through age 5, finally the year at 6 it’s tapering off, maybe once a month. My husband tells my son only babies do that, calls him peeboy. It’s awful. I genuinely think he had zero control over bed wetting. He does it in his sleep, it’s not him being lazy and not getting up. Honestly, the problem is I hate how my husband treats our son and I wish I could get him away from him but if we divorced my his would be around my son unmonitored. I try my best to buffer it. To stop it. To protect my baby and make sure he knows
Load More Replies...There's so much in here to address and it's really impossible to comment on all of it. What I will say is this: parents who have regrets can apologize for those regrets. We make mistakes as parents often. Owning those mistakes can be vital while they're still kids, but especially once they're grown, it can be freeing and healing as an adult to have your parents apologize for their regretful behavior while they were raising you. It's never too late to apologize. Even in the very sad situation where a child has died, write out that apology and let yourself embrace the forgiveness that might have been there had they still been here to hear it. A parent taking responsibility is such an empowering thing for a child. It unlocks a whole different level of healing.
when my mom found out she was pregnant with me, my parents both watched a lot of Supernanny. I've turned out pretty damn decent ngl. Supernanny teaches a lot of great things, and they visibly change depending on the kid(s). They're all on YouTube rn, highly recommend it's a lot of fun to watch. She basically teaches the parents the right way to parent their kid(s) because the kids are absolutely horrible and insane. They used Supernanny's tips and I don't have many parent problems
It should come as not surprise that while useful and necessary therapy is not a guarantee of a "happy ending." There are many variables, one size does not fit all and all parties concerned have to do the work. I know people who went into therapy because they thought it was an easy way out. The other thing is it's expensive.
I know someone who had a few opportunities to get full custody of his kids and cut the mother off completely. But he didn’t because he thought they needed a mother. They are adults now and the older son wised up, got therapy and hasn’t spoken to her in five years. She completely ruined the other son and he’ll be starting his prison sentence soon.
The reason most parents are successful raising most children is for one reason, and one reason only: their children are flexible (and can respond to the parenting they receive). Children who are not require more specialized parents. I strongly recommend Ross Greene (The Explosive Child)'s Collaborative and Proactive Solutions (name change from Collaborative Problem Solving, since it seems someone took their phrase). It's a game changer when you stop looking at difficult behaviors as willful defiance and start looking at what is underneath. https://livesinthebalance.org/
Sometimes it's just the nature of the kid. Our daughter is so polite, so well behaved. This is not a humblebrag, because it's just not our doing. It's just natural for her. I always feel awful for parents who work really hard and still have monster offspring. Because we barely have to reprimand her and she does what she's told. We have to do hardly anything and she's just so easy. Life really isnt fair. So don't judge these parents by those kids. It's often not their fault.
Rereading that it really does sound like a humblebrag, it's not meant to. Just wanted to give a different perspective. everyone thinks we are awesome parents, raising a perfect kid. and we don't work any harder than anyone else, we are not wiser, not more compassionate, just more lucky I suppose. We don't deserve the praise, so don't give these people hassle for being bad parents when they often don't deserve it.
Load More Replies...Growing up my entire family always told me that I was in the way. That I was a burden. Anytime I asked for help I was shoved to the side and told to get out of everyone's way. I'm an adult now and I have severe issues with talking to people. I feel like I'm bothering everyone. I don't want to ask for help, so I struggle alone. I can't even go out to eat without feeling like I'm making the cashier mad. I just want to hide in my room and stay away from everyone.
Someone said that to me ONCE and it hurt like hell. I can imagine how hard it is to come back from experiencing that a lot! I hope it helps to know that they were wrong, that you deserved better and that they (probably) did their best but their best was rubbish! I hope you meet some lovely people who treat you the way you deserve, that is with love. Have you thought of getting a dog? They're great as something to love and love you back plus dog park people are generally nice. Finally, I send you a big hug and best wishes.
Load More Replies...Do not ever, ever sweep suspected abuse under the carpet. And never, ever blame the victim. That is how you break a parent child relationship for infinity. No matter what they do to try to do better and have a relationship with the kid as adults... but it can never be as effective as the parent wants. That relationship is damaged, forever
I think a big one is parent the child you have, not the one you want. My husband and I are both really smart and we’re in gifted programs since elementary. Our son is very bright but has his struggles. He has a speech delay, he really struggles to make sentences, and he has an IEP and speech therapy for this. I love and accept him and still push for him to make improvements he’s capable of. My husband is really stuck on him not being gifted and being… I can’t think of a word I’m willing to say but basically looking down on him having special needs. He compares him to himself as a child. He compares him to other kids. I hate it and wish I could help him see the harm that does. My son is a great kid. So sweet and loving, so empathetic. High energy and playful. He listens well (in my opinion and accordingly to teachers), but my husband thinks if he doesn’t do something the first time he asks right away that our son is disrespecting him, even if he didn’t get his attention beforehand.
I think it’s normal to have to get the kid’s attention first and to repeat yourself a few times (not 1000 but like 3 sometimes). My husband thinks it’s because we don’t spank him (I won’t allow it and we agreed on this before we got married/had a child). Instead of trying to find a different way to approach him he just yells and is angry. He’s not acting like the adult. He also thinks he can shame him into things. For example, bed wetting. My son wet the bed every night through age 5, finally the year at 6 it’s tapering off, maybe once a month. My husband tells my son only babies do that, calls him peeboy. It’s awful. I genuinely think he had zero control over bed wetting. He does it in his sleep, it’s not him being lazy and not getting up. Honestly, the problem is I hate how my husband treats our son and I wish I could get him away from him but if we divorced my his would be around my son unmonitored. I try my best to buffer it. To stop it. To protect my baby and make sure he knows
Load More Replies...There's so much in here to address and it's really impossible to comment on all of it. What I will say is this: parents who have regrets can apologize for those regrets. We make mistakes as parents often. Owning those mistakes can be vital while they're still kids, but especially once they're grown, it can be freeing and healing as an adult to have your parents apologize for their regretful behavior while they were raising you. It's never too late to apologize. Even in the very sad situation where a child has died, write out that apology and let yourself embrace the forgiveness that might have been there had they still been here to hear it. A parent taking responsibility is such an empowering thing for a child. It unlocks a whole different level of healing.
when my mom found out she was pregnant with me, my parents both watched a lot of Supernanny. I've turned out pretty damn decent ngl. Supernanny teaches a lot of great things, and they visibly change depending on the kid(s). They're all on YouTube rn, highly recommend it's a lot of fun to watch. She basically teaches the parents the right way to parent their kid(s) because the kids are absolutely horrible and insane. They used Supernanny's tips and I don't have many parent problems
It should come as not surprise that while useful and necessary therapy is not a guarantee of a "happy ending." There are many variables, one size does not fit all and all parties concerned have to do the work. I know people who went into therapy because they thought it was an easy way out. The other thing is it's expensive.
I know someone who had a few opportunities to get full custody of his kids and cut the mother off completely. But he didn’t because he thought they needed a mother. They are adults now and the older son wised up, got therapy and hasn’t spoken to her in five years. She completely ruined the other son and he’ll be starting his prison sentence soon.
The reason most parents are successful raising most children is for one reason, and one reason only: their children are flexible (and can respond to the parenting they receive). Children who are not require more specialized parents. I strongly recommend Ross Greene (The Explosive Child)'s Collaborative and Proactive Solutions (name change from Collaborative Problem Solving, since it seems someone took their phrase). It's a game changer when you stop looking at difficult behaviors as willful defiance and start looking at what is underneath. https://livesinthebalance.org/