No parent intends to spoil their kid, bottom line. But as circumstances, age, and love would have it, often it turns out the opposite. Especially when it’s not you, but other parents, family members and friends pointing out that your mini-me is badly behaved. How dare they call that little angel that way!
So today, we are diving into a series of real-life quasi-horror stories about “spoiled brat” kids from people who encountered them. From babysitters to school teachers, here are some of the most shocking and eye-opening examples of just how treating a kid too indulgently and letting them get away with anything backfires against you.
And you know how it goes: spoiled kids grow up into spoiled adults, or some grown-ups act like they were spoiled kids. Of course, we are all kids at heart, but hey, rolling on your back in Wal-mart for not getting what you want from life when you're 30+ (or wanting to do that!) is probably a no-go.
Scroll down through the stories below and be sure to share your thoughts on the subject matter in the comment section!
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In college, I was trying to work out how I was going to purchase a textbook that I needed for a class. I had come to the conclusion that I had to wait till the next week when my part time job paycheck came in and I'd try to survive in the class until then. My friend took notice of this and came to me the next day with a brand new text book that he bought with the credit card his parents gave him. Said he buys so much on the card that his parents wouldn't question him about it even though he didn't get it for himself. He was super spoiled, but also helped me out so I can't sh*t on him.
Even though he got tons of stuff from his parents, it sounds like he managed not to be totally spoiled. What a nice thing to do!
The Macbook Girl Incident.
I was a student tech at our university, so I was usually helping with repairing student and the occasional professor's laptop or desktop. However, during a big sale, it was required that we helped freshman and their parents with buying computers from the student store. Now, we had two options at this point for students who chose to buy our laptops with a student discount. We had Dell Latitudes and Insprions, and we had Macbooks. A girl and a father walked in and she darted right over to the Macbooks. She knew exactly which one she wanted. Her father told her that they didn't have the cash for the laptop, and at my recommendation, we settled on a Dell Latitude Laptop. I thought it would be an easy sale.
Well, the father and I did. The daughter did not agree with our opinion. She threw a f*cking tantrum right in the middle of the store, initially with hushed reservations which escalated to her loudly calling her father out, telling him how much of a good girl she was, how much of a sh*tty father he was because he wouldn't buy her things like her mother always did, and how he was RUINING HER LIFE, because she would be unpopular if she didn't have a Macbook. The father then said he was stepping out for five minutes, at which point she began asking random customers to help defend her, all of them looked at her like she was crazy, one even told her that they'd buy the dell laptop from her for fifty bucks minus retail, others said they'd be happy to get any laptop for free, and she should be too, that their parents never helped them through college, etc. When the father came back, they continued fighting, and he left once again, telling her she was not getting the Macbook. She left a minute or so later.
Fifteen minutes later, she came to the register where I was at, and asked for a Macbook Pro. When I plopped down the box, her eyes widened. I took the card out of her hand, and examined it. It was obviously the Father's card. I asked for ID, and did the usual policy for high end purchases. Because it was not her card, I declined the sale. She gave me every excuse in the book, oh he's outside, dad gave me the card, blah blah blah. None of it stuck and I refused the sale, explaining the situation to the store manager, who had seen the entire thing and confirmed it. The father, confident where his daughter was, came storming in a few seconds later. He asked her what happened and I told him exactly what had happened, and she gave me extremely dirty look as I handed back the card. She had stolen the card from the backpack the father was carrying their stuff in. She turned quickly and begged for the dell laptop, but the father refused anything, saying he had a much better punishment. We all laughed and cringed. Others in the line chuckled.
I saw her two months later and she scowled at me, blaming me for not just swiping the damned card, because she had to use the lab computers for everything for an entire semester as punishment. I laughed, and walked back to my desk.
Definitely her father didn't spoil her. So... not belonging here? Entitled, not spoiled.
A friend of mine from high school. She was filthy rich thanks to her step-dad. I'm just going to list a few of the things I remember about her:
- Her mom and step-dad asked her for permission if they could have a child together and she told them no because she wanted to be an only child.
- She constantly whined because her parents refused to move out of the master suite of their mansion. She felt that she deserved it because the attached walk in closet and bathroom were bigger than hers. To reconcile this, she had her parents pay to redecorate her room every single year.
- On her 16th birthday, her step-dad gave her his one-year-old hummer. She full on cried when he tried to give her the keys because it was the "wrong color" and used. They went out and bought her a brand new one in the color she liked that day.
- She only wore designer clothes and would constantly make fun of people who couldn't afford to wear the same. When we went to the mall, I would often buy nothing, but her parents would give her not one, but two credit cards to buy whatever she wanted.
- She hated doing her homework so her mom and step-dad did all of it, including writing her papers and doing her school projects.
- She had her own private bonus room with a flat screen, multiple gaming systems, a desktop, massage chairs, a pool table, etc. If her parents tried to go in it then she would scream at them.
If you’re a parent to a young kid, people glaring at you is something you’re probably familiar with. Whether it’s a public tantrum in the candy aisle at the supermarket, or the stares when your mini-me gets away with acting like a big boss, you just know what’s going on their minds: “what a spoiled brat.”
in person? Ben Roethlisberger. The biggest spoiled little kid I've ever met was ~25 years old and actually said, verbatim, "Do you know who I am?" when a bouncer wouldn't let him and his entourage cut in front of a line of 50+ people to get into a night club. It was both hilarious and nauseating. After Ben stormed off (with the obligatory "I'll talk to your boss" threats), people were tipping the doorman for the entertainment.
I was talking about the water crisis with my students and we were discussing what the response would be if our local area had an impending Day 0. One of my students shrugged and said, "well, I would just go to our house in Spain."
I reminded her that this wasn't an option for the majority of the population and her response was, "well, it's not my fault if they can't afford it. Get a job."
It was the very beginning of the school year and the majority of my students in that class were from low-income familes who had never been overseas let alone had a holiday house in Europe. She sat by herself for the rest of the year and I don't believe it was by choice.
I know a couple who couldn't have children. They finally got approved for adoption when they were older and they finally got their first child in their mid to late 50s.
They were just so happy with finally having a child that they spoiled him rotten. Anything he wanted, they gave him. He grew up demanding things and throwing tantrums. They let him eat what he wanted so he ballooned in size. Eventually he dropped out of school because he didn't want to go and his parents were fine with this until the state told them they weren't allowed to do this, so they got his butt back into school, which he failed miserably in because he didn't give a sh*t.
He was eating away at all of their savings. He would randomly pick up new hobbies and needed top-of-the-line things for those hobbies, which he gave up on after a few months. His parents received an inheritance, and he blew through that entire amount within a few months, spending on stupid sh*t.
Eventually, his mother passed away, and his elderly dad, who is in his 70s, is having to work two full jobs while his son, now in his 20s, does nothing all day except drive around in his vehicle, live streaming himself talking while driving. He's already had two accidents from filming himself while driving.
His extended family tried to have a family meeting with the dad, telling him that he's got to put his foot down because his son is going to kill someone, and when the dad finally had a talk with the son, the son attacked him, knocking him down a flight of steps.
He didn't want to press charges. After he got well again, he went back to working his two jobs, and became an alcoholic during his non-work hours, letting his son run all over him because he is terrified of telling him "No".
The worst part... the dad has spent his entire retirement fund on this "kid". He is going to have to work until he dies because he has a parasitic son who refuses to do anything except spend spend spend.
This is really sad, and easy to see how someone desperate for a kid could inadvertently spoil the kid they have. I've heard of it happening after a miscarriage or the death of a child too.
You may argue that every kid has their off days. And it’s true even with adults; on some days we are better versions of ourselves than others. But it’s all part of being human. However, what separates spoiled kids from kids who are acting weird on a given day is that the former ones “are stuck in ‘me’ mode,” suggests Michele Borba, an educational psychologist. If that mode when the world has to revolve around them is their daily MO, you’re raising a spoiled kid, bottom line.
I was at a friends house who has two little girls, about 7 and 2 and it was around Christmas time. My friend also had a few other friends over who had brought Christmas presents for the two girls. The 7 year old opened one of the presents (mermaid/ocean puzzle and a book) and started crying because she didn’t like the gift. My friend, the mom, tried to console her but she continued having a tantrum. So the mom then asks the friend who brought the present if she wouldn’t mind getting her something different because the daughter didn’t like what she got. The friend looked pretty uncomfortable but agreed she would consider taking the presents back in exchange for something else. The mom said her daughter really wanted an American girl pony, much more expensive than the two presents the friend originally bought. Mom then proceeds to leave the house to go buy this pony for her daughter. Mind you, mom’s friends were from out of town visiting and she just randomly leaves to get her daughter this pony because she’s still throwing a tantrum. Mom comes back, and has the friend give her daughter the new toy.
Guy I went to school with. He was a rich brat who got whatever he wanted, immediately and without question. He came to school with designer clothes, bag, watches, etc. and bought thv latest and most expensive phones as soon as they released.
For his 16th birthday, his parents bought him a brand new MG roadster. Dude never took any driving lessons but took it out in the roads anyway. Within a week, he wrapped it around a lamppost. He somehow walked away with minor injuries but the car was a total loss, it wasn't even recognisable as a vehicle. How did his parents react to their child driving illegally and completely destroying what was at the time a seriously expensive car?
They bought him another one.
That's completely f****d up. Not only are the parents giving him what he wants but they also condone his illegal behaviour. He could have bloody killed someone.
Have a billionaire customer with 4 kids, all of them pretty spoiled but the youngest once said to me spitefully "we're going on tiger next week and you're not allowed to come."
(Tiger is the name of their yacht in southern italy)
It's not just that he's spoiled that gets to me, it's the fact he knows it and rubs it in.
On the other hand, the word spoiled itself may be flawed when referring to ill-behaved kids who think and act like they’re superior to others. It may wrongly suggest that the kid is “ruined” and that there’s nothing that can be done about it. But this is not true. So to find out what exact steps parents could take in unspoiling their child, we reached out to Lynn How. Lynn is the author of “Positive Young Mind” and a life coach who specializes in supporting educators, parents, and children with improving and prevention of mental health issues.
Ex-friend of mine was given a puppy at his 7th birthday party. He threw a tantrum because he didn't like the breed.
Thankfully, the puppy was given to his aunt and the little sh*t was told he would never have a pet. Cue epic tantrum saying he changed his mind. Nope. Didn't work.
Well good, that means his parents stood firm despite the tantrum.
My friend's ten-year-old son is a brat, and always getting sent to his room for one thing or another. The other day, I peeked in to the kid's room. Laptop, desktop, TV, and three game systems. Oh my god, what a horrible punishment. Amnesty International is going to write letters about this.
My 11yo cousin didn't feel like cutting her food, so her dad cut it for her. Later, she didn't want to read her school assignment, so her father read it to her.
According to the life coach, after realizing the problem, a parent should be proactive in wanting to change it. Leaving it as it is will not only not help the situation, it may also worsen it. “Be committed to make a change,” Lynn said, referring to the very first step. She added: “Get used to saying no and letting them have the tantrum, then saying no again.” It turns out, our words have so much more power than we believe if we really stick to what we say.
An old friend of mine and his family are loaded. They constantly get the newest car, massive house, multiple out of country vacations a year first class, and he’ll get the most expensive tickets possible for concerts and mommy and daddy would never say no.
When the iPhones/ and iPod touches were blowing up, he asked for a very specific color and GB for the iPod touch. It was near Christmas time and they were sold out EVERYWHERE. His mom was so disappointed that she paid a lady at the mall DOUBLE the price of the newest iPhone max GB while she was walking out and so he could get something similar since she couldn’t find what he really wanted for Christmas.
Fast forward to Christmas Day, he opened the box and was so pissed it wasn’t what he wanted that he threw it so hard onto the floor saying that it wasn’t what he asked for. It was DESTROYED. Then he called her a b**** and left to his room without opening the rest of his presents.
She then had a breakdown and went to the mall again to ask for what he wanted for the next few weeks until yet again, someone had just bought one and she paid double to gift it for him again.
That was the last time we ever spoke and from what I hear, he has no job, still lives with mom and dad, no high school diploma, upgrades his Mercedes every year, and decided that he’s going to be a rapper or nothing at all.
I used to baby sit these kids. The one girl didn't feel like doing her homework, so I told her we only have a couple problems left and I had been helping her, so it was gonna go by quickly, and we could play games as soon as she was done.
In response, she told me she wished I was dead (this girl was 6 years old), threw a bunch of crackers on the floor, kicked her dog in the nuts, and said she was going to blame it all on me and get me fired. Of course, her parents didn't believe I threw food on the floor and assaulted their dog, but there was absolutely no repercussions for what she did. They just turned their heads, put their hands on their hips and were like, "what did we say about lying?" And that was it.
My husband and I moved to a new city and spent a lot of time with his gal pal from high school. She had a toddler son who was absolutely atrocious and without mental disability. She threatened him with punishment all of the time for his behavior but never followed through. We would often meet her for dinner where he would throw a tantrum, and she’d say, “If you keep acting like that, we’re leaving.” He kept acting up but she never left with him.
She had him with a live-in partner who is Cuban and grew up with a “Cuban boys should be treated like gods” mentality. One time we saw her get upset with the kid for throwing a toy at her head, only to see the kid’s dad yell at her, “No! You shouldn’t have given him that toy! Now YOU apologize to HIM!” The kid was in a stroller until he was 5 because he couldn’t be trusted not to run off into traffic when they were out in public.
The last time we hung out with them, we went mini-golfing. Each time one of us hit our ball, he would snatch it and throw it across the course. I wisened up to this and immediately went to pick up my ball for safekeeping after I hit it. As I was picking it up, he tried to grab it out of my hand and fell over lightly. He laid on the ground, pounding his fists and crying. His parents looked at me like I was the a*shole. We ended up limiting our time with them as a result of the kid’s bad behavior.
Lynn continued with her tips: “Follow through on behavior sanctions and ensure sanctions are consistent as well as the right size—don’t say, for example, ‘if you do that again we are going home’ when you have no intention of actually going home!”
Most importantly, the life coach reminds parents that changes don’t happen overnight and you gotta just stick to it and keep at it. Getting friends and family on board may also work wonders. “For example, make sure your partner doesn’t give in when you have said ‘no,’ make sure you are on the same page,” Lynn explained.
Spoiled child syndrome that bled into adulthood. I work at a collection agency, and this guy racked up a 200k debt. Thing is, anything of that size we had to go over financials.
Dude got 60k a month from his father. A month. He got more in a month than I do in a year. But, still followed procedures. He claimed huge amounts for expenses. Didn’t add up to the 60k though, only 20k a month. Dude could pay off his debt in half a year. He then informs me he can’t afford the 40k monthly payment, as he is renovating his house. And spending all of that 40k each month on said renovations.
Thing is, he was technically employed by his father, and that was a garnishment source. So when he basically threw a tantrum and hung up. I just hit send on a wage garnishment, which his father would likely see.
Being a young spoilt brat is something, but being a old spoilt brat is just next level.
I worked at Toys R Us so I had to listen to some pretty ridiculous sh*t. What stuck with me though was a boy, who was about 9, tell his mother they better leave with the nerf gun or else she know what he’ll do when they get home. The look on his face was akin to that of a person who purposefully belittles their spouse in public.
Some douchenugget who once told me he was going to feel like he was living in poverty if he made anything less than a million a year. The kid lived in Idaho, wasn't even 20 yet and had never worked a day in his life.
Teaching your child to be responsible from an early age is also crucial. One such way to go about it is simply providing them pocket money instead of buying them things so they have a better understanding of the value of money, Lynn said.
Not a kid, he’s in his late 20’s, but he “works” for his rich dad’s company, but takes a week long “business” trip at least once a month and posts Facebook statuses b*tching about the most minor inconveniences on his vacations. For example he posted a paragraph berating the “stupid idiot” waitress who didn’t cut the limes small enough to fit into his Corona bottle, and how he didn’t tip her because she “didn’t deserve it”.
Kid at my high school.
When he was 14 he had a learners permit but his parents got him a Mercedes-Benz G-Class. Every day he drove it to school and he was determined to park it in the parking lot to show it off. So he had his housekeeper drive to school with him and her son drove a car behind her to take her back home (which was only about 2 miles away from our school).
I lived in Russia and worked for a very wealthy family. The four year old had very clearly never been told “no.” The first time I did, he threw a full scale tantrum for four and a half hours. He was a monster (though not to me once he understood I had all the time in the world for tantrums, and definitely wasn’t going to give in to one).
In the end, any parent wants their child to grow up into an independent, responsible adult. That can’t be done if you continually spoil them by showering them with whatever they want, and by letting them get away with anything. “Develop resilience by letting them figure out their own issues (up to a point!)—if they have an issue in a playground, for example, observe from afar to see if they can sort it out themselves before bowling in,” Lynn concluded.
I work at a summer camp and we had a 12 year old come in after his birthday. He got a brand new Iphone that had just come out, His mom was a nurse and was always stressed to all hell when she came out. The mom came in to tell the kid she got him a case for his new phone, he asked what kind it was, and the mom said it was an all black otterbox. The kid then berated his single mom, that works day and night shifts, with a mentally disabled 6 year old, who had also just bought him a $600+ phone, for buying an "ugly and old woman case". For a solid five minutes, I have never looked at someone with such disrespect, I wish I could've done something for the mom.
I hope she's doing okay, she had a lot on her plate and she deserves a good life.
My little brother. He has a PS4/Xbone, gaming PC with two monitors, laptop, smartphone, TV, Netflix subscription. He gets every game he points at. He’s 11 years old...
My mom used to run an in-home daycare. One kid named Jackson did lots of horrible things for attention, but here are the 3 worst. (He was like, 5 or 6)
1: Break a TV by throwing his backpack at it. 2: Bit his little sister hard enough to break the skin (she was like 2 or 3) 3: a year after we stopped babysitting him, we heard from his mother that he had stabbed his father with a pocket knife and they had to go to the ER.
Going to high school with the son of the owner of a large TV company. He thought he should be allowed to sit alone in the classroom surrounded by unfilled desks. I had the "privilege" of sitting in front of him and was constantly harassed with attacks from his ruler and pens if he thought I was even remotely leaning back.
In high school, girl turned 16, parents gave her a new bmw with the understanding that the live-in maid would use it once, maybe twice, a week to get groceries/run errands. Unacceptable! A week after her epic tantrum she had a brand new Land Rover.
In college, there was a serious party girl (drugs/alcohol),she goes out one night with her car (think it was a Land Rover). Can’t find it after a night at the bar. Tells her parents it was stolen, G-Wagon replacement. Turns out her car wasn’t stolen it was parked in a lot across from the bar, not the one adjacent to the bar. Oh well, she had two cars at school for the next two years...
I started working part-time when I was 12 to save for a car. By 16 I had $7k saved up. I bought myself a used Pontiac G5 Coupe that I was very proud of. At the same time, a popular girl in school turned 16 and her dad bought her a brand new Mustang GT. She ended up crashing it in winter that year...
I paid for my first car as well, I was so proud of myself. Even though it only cost $550 and I never got a chance to drive it lol.
My cousins. On my sisters 7th birthday my cousin called her to say happy birthday. My sister began telling her about the awesome party she was having later that day. My cousin was upset she couldn't go, so my Aunt put her on a plane that day and arranged for a driver to take her to our house (Uber was not a thing). They are upper middle class but by no means rich enough to be doing that kind of stuff.
Some kid (like 11 years old) that got an iPhone 8 for Christmas and she was like "I was expecting the iPhone X
I have a samsung that came cheaper when you get t mobile :)
I got a phone when I was 11, but it was purely because I would walk from my mums house to my dads house and back. Then when I was 12 I had a major meltdown and threw it on the ground where it broke, I cried for a few hours, and then once I got a phone again the next year I was so careful that it didn't even get a scratch. I don't even understand why people are so crazy over iPhones, I've always preferred the cheaper phones
I would never have said that. My parents would have taken back the gift and a few other things besides to remind me nothing is for granted. Sheesh!
What is it about Iphones that make them so expensive? I've never had an iphone and wouldn't buy one on principle. They're deliberately overpriced for what they are.
A kid I was a nanny for in the US: she threw the biggest fit over the fact, that her parents gave a backpack to charity. She got a new one just a month ago. She had a friend who got everything she wanted. No matter what price.
I was so appalled. I usually work with kids who have so little and who don’t act like that.
But they were just spoiled brats tbh.
But for a few cases maybe, not the children are to be blamed here. It are the parents. Ultimately, they deprive their children of learning basic life skills. The children will pay this failure in a way that money cannot compensate for.
Reminds me of the song the Oompa Loompas sing after Veruca Salt has her conniption fit in the goose room. Who's to blame when a kid is a brat? The mother and the father.
Load More Replies...ALWAYS bad parenting. Except for sociopaths, kids are not born bad, they are raised that way.
Load More Replies...The only light I can see in these stories is that, thanks to these asshole kids, their wealthy moron parents are putting more of their money back into circulation where it can benefit society.
I'm reminded of a story by James Herriot (a vet and author). He knew a couple who owned two terriers and those dogs were the most aggressive, horrible little monsters imaginable. They barked and snarled at visitors and attacked the vet while the owners stood by mumbling apologetically. The dogs eventually passed away, and the owners bought two adorable, sweet little puppies to replace them. In a matter of months those puppies were just as horrible and badly behaved as the last two, and I think we can all guess why. Children, like pets, need discipline and boundaries. If all you do is smile and nod and mumble vague apologies, then you have nobody to blame but yourself when someone inevitably gets bitten.
wen i went food shopping my husband went to get the stuff on the list and this woman saw me with my mask on. ill let u guys know ahead of time y this situation was messed up. im epileptic and covid can cause seizures for me so i wear a mask even tho i got the vaccine. now back to the entitled woman. she saw me with my mask on and said "omg were u vaccinated if not stay the hell away from me" i told her it was none of her business especially if she was going to b rude and went back to talking to another woman on line waiting at the deli counter. this woman then scoffed at me and said "u r a danger to everyone if u wont say if u r or not" at this point the woman i was talking to stuck up for me and said we both r im just immune compromised and wear a mask for extra protection. this woman scoffed at her and said she didnt care im still a danger to ppl and cut in front of both of us to make her order at the deli counter. the guy at the deli counter witnessed all of this and stuck up for us but she said if he didnt serve her shed leave a complaint so he served her. wen she left he apologized and then i asked how the woman i was talking to knew i was wearing the mask for extra protection due to medical reasons. she told me it was a guess since she saw my vaccination card in my wallet earlier wen i went into to give my husband the list. she also thanked the deli guy for serving the entitled b!tch first bc she didnt want that woman around me any longer. the deli guy replied with "neither did i. this young lady comes here once a week and is so kind to everyone here. i couldnt stand to see her b disrespected." i have social anxiety so i was about to have a panic attack but thanks to 2 kind ppl it was disfused. i hate getting into conflicts with "im more important the u" kinds of ppl.
I’m so sorry! I have family which are similar to you. I can’t imagine how terrible it must be. Hopefully you are doing well!
Load More Replies...Parents, please do not raise your precious little Jimmy or precious little Jennifer as a spoiled brat. They will someday grow into insufferable adults. Everybody will hate them. They will have endless trouble in school and any profession. Please don't do this for our sakes, if not for the kid's sake. Okay?
My 3rd grader acts spoiled and entitled. We try hard to teach her otherwise. She throws her whiny fits when she doesn't get her way. I am point blank with her, like this example last week when she cried she did not get to go to book fair again and buy more books. Her classmate got to go three times. -"there are kids out there who can't afford books. You're complaining that you had $25 to spend on books, you got to go on an earlier day because you got your work done. Did your friend buy books each time? And even if they did, that is THEIR family. You're acting entitled and spoiled. Is that how you want to be perceived?" Kids are kids. Don't always blame the parents. And on the flip side, she earned money to spend on charity, opted to donate the money for XMas presents on charity, and is over the moon to receive a box or empty coke bottle to play with.
@Paradise: I have a nephew who was um, difficult, at times as a kid. When he was really young, he could throw epic fits over the smallest thing. For a long time -- as in most of his elementary school years -- I joked that not only did he think he was the center of the universe, he was sure he was the emperor of it in the bargain. It was not the result of bad parenting, either! My brother and his wife had clear boundaries, did not in the least spoil their kids. They just had a strong willed boy who didn't like being thwarted, and who thought life was "unfair" if it didn't run the way he wanted. (Sound familiar?) I am happy and proud to say he did eventually grow up, emotionally speaking. He has come a long way from those bratty days! He's now a responsible, caring, funny, smart, decent man. He'll be 34 on his next birthday, got married this year to a lovely woman that he is very good to (and with). Don't give up! All your hard work will pay off.
Load More Replies...Some of these kids are going to wake up in cold, harsh reality when their parents are no longer there to pay for everything.
They have a very low chance of surviving the end of civilization. No survival skills, totally dependent on brainlessly indulging parents/guardians - they'll be easy prey for pumas or bears, or packs of wolves or abandoned dogs. Or other humans.
Load More Replies...I can’t even gone though halfway without being disgust. There’s should be a school for parenting
Normally I am opposed to corporal punishment, but a lot of these little monsters desperately need a good thrashing.
Load More Replies...oh my gosh.. such spoiled brats are angry that they don’t have a 100k dollar car and I don’t even have a phone (to not waste my parent’s money)
I read all of this and I'm just lost at how much money has been sunk into things these people don't need, care for, or appreciate, when that money could make a huge quality of life difference to the people around them, even change the future prospects of other children. It's such a shame... People have so much capacity for goodness, selflessness, hard work, appreciation, and so many other positive traits and many of these kids will never learn who they could have become if they heard "no" a little more often
No kids, so f**k you all brats...i keep my money and buy things for me and sit and watch the fools with the brats fight.. only reason to go to malls free entertainment. (well costs me a coffee)
I've got one. My oldest friend. He threw a tantrum when he didn't get to go on his yearly trip to Disneyland because of CV-19, and once stole his dad's credit card to buy something like $5000 worth of V-Bucks or whatever the Fortnite currency is. His mom [airline pilot] got a second job at Target to pay off the bills. Other than that, he's a decent kid though.
But for a few cases maybe, not the children are to be blamed here. It are the parents. Ultimately, they deprive their children of learning basic life skills. The children will pay this failure in a way that money cannot compensate for.
Reminds me of the song the Oompa Loompas sing after Veruca Salt has her conniption fit in the goose room. Who's to blame when a kid is a brat? The mother and the father.
Load More Replies...ALWAYS bad parenting. Except for sociopaths, kids are not born bad, they are raised that way.
Load More Replies...The only light I can see in these stories is that, thanks to these asshole kids, their wealthy moron parents are putting more of their money back into circulation where it can benefit society.
I'm reminded of a story by James Herriot (a vet and author). He knew a couple who owned two terriers and those dogs were the most aggressive, horrible little monsters imaginable. They barked and snarled at visitors and attacked the vet while the owners stood by mumbling apologetically. The dogs eventually passed away, and the owners bought two adorable, sweet little puppies to replace them. In a matter of months those puppies were just as horrible and badly behaved as the last two, and I think we can all guess why. Children, like pets, need discipline and boundaries. If all you do is smile and nod and mumble vague apologies, then you have nobody to blame but yourself when someone inevitably gets bitten.
wen i went food shopping my husband went to get the stuff on the list and this woman saw me with my mask on. ill let u guys know ahead of time y this situation was messed up. im epileptic and covid can cause seizures for me so i wear a mask even tho i got the vaccine. now back to the entitled woman. she saw me with my mask on and said "omg were u vaccinated if not stay the hell away from me" i told her it was none of her business especially if she was going to b rude and went back to talking to another woman on line waiting at the deli counter. this woman then scoffed at me and said "u r a danger to everyone if u wont say if u r or not" at this point the woman i was talking to stuck up for me and said we both r im just immune compromised and wear a mask for extra protection. this woman scoffed at her and said she didnt care im still a danger to ppl and cut in front of both of us to make her order at the deli counter. the guy at the deli counter witnessed all of this and stuck up for us but she said if he didnt serve her shed leave a complaint so he served her. wen she left he apologized and then i asked how the woman i was talking to knew i was wearing the mask for extra protection due to medical reasons. she told me it was a guess since she saw my vaccination card in my wallet earlier wen i went into to give my husband the list. she also thanked the deli guy for serving the entitled b!tch first bc she didnt want that woman around me any longer. the deli guy replied with "neither did i. this young lady comes here once a week and is so kind to everyone here. i couldnt stand to see her b disrespected." i have social anxiety so i was about to have a panic attack but thanks to 2 kind ppl it was disfused. i hate getting into conflicts with "im more important the u" kinds of ppl.
I’m so sorry! I have family which are similar to you. I can’t imagine how terrible it must be. Hopefully you are doing well!
Load More Replies...Parents, please do not raise your precious little Jimmy or precious little Jennifer as a spoiled brat. They will someday grow into insufferable adults. Everybody will hate them. They will have endless trouble in school and any profession. Please don't do this for our sakes, if not for the kid's sake. Okay?
My 3rd grader acts spoiled and entitled. We try hard to teach her otherwise. She throws her whiny fits when she doesn't get her way. I am point blank with her, like this example last week when she cried she did not get to go to book fair again and buy more books. Her classmate got to go three times. -"there are kids out there who can't afford books. You're complaining that you had $25 to spend on books, you got to go on an earlier day because you got your work done. Did your friend buy books each time? And even if they did, that is THEIR family. You're acting entitled and spoiled. Is that how you want to be perceived?" Kids are kids. Don't always blame the parents. And on the flip side, she earned money to spend on charity, opted to donate the money for XMas presents on charity, and is over the moon to receive a box or empty coke bottle to play with.
@Paradise: I have a nephew who was um, difficult, at times as a kid. When he was really young, he could throw epic fits over the smallest thing. For a long time -- as in most of his elementary school years -- I joked that not only did he think he was the center of the universe, he was sure he was the emperor of it in the bargain. It was not the result of bad parenting, either! My brother and his wife had clear boundaries, did not in the least spoil their kids. They just had a strong willed boy who didn't like being thwarted, and who thought life was "unfair" if it didn't run the way he wanted. (Sound familiar?) I am happy and proud to say he did eventually grow up, emotionally speaking. He has come a long way from those bratty days! He's now a responsible, caring, funny, smart, decent man. He'll be 34 on his next birthday, got married this year to a lovely woman that he is very good to (and with). Don't give up! All your hard work will pay off.
Load More Replies...Some of these kids are going to wake up in cold, harsh reality when their parents are no longer there to pay for everything.
They have a very low chance of surviving the end of civilization. No survival skills, totally dependent on brainlessly indulging parents/guardians - they'll be easy prey for pumas or bears, or packs of wolves or abandoned dogs. Or other humans.
Load More Replies...I can’t even gone though halfway without being disgust. There’s should be a school for parenting
Normally I am opposed to corporal punishment, but a lot of these little monsters desperately need a good thrashing.
Load More Replies...oh my gosh.. such spoiled brats are angry that they don’t have a 100k dollar car and I don’t even have a phone (to not waste my parent’s money)
I read all of this and I'm just lost at how much money has been sunk into things these people don't need, care for, or appreciate, when that money could make a huge quality of life difference to the people around them, even change the future prospects of other children. It's such a shame... People have so much capacity for goodness, selflessness, hard work, appreciation, and so many other positive traits and many of these kids will never learn who they could have become if they heard "no" a little more often
No kids, so f**k you all brats...i keep my money and buy things for me and sit and watch the fools with the brats fight.. only reason to go to malls free entertainment. (well costs me a coffee)
I've got one. My oldest friend. He threw a tantrum when he didn't get to go on his yearly trip to Disneyland because of CV-19, and once stole his dad's credit card to buy something like $5000 worth of V-Bucks or whatever the Fortnite currency is. His mom [airline pilot] got a second job at Target to pay off the bills. Other than that, he's a decent kid though.