snarlingcoyote
<font color=blue>I know people who live in really
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2008
- Messages
- 5,938
Okay, so I don't have kids, but I like kids, as they're the ones who will be here when I'm gone. I consider, over all, that small kids are a reflection on their parents. If the parents are kind and insist upon kindness and consideration for others from their kids, I hold those parents in high regard. But now I'm beginning to wonder how much older kids' behavior should be judged as a reflection of the parents.
I've had discussions with some parents recently. A friend's daughter bullied another girl earlier in the school year. This friend reacted in absolute horror and has been doing everything in her power to keep her daughter from being a mean girl as she gets older, and it seems to be working.
Another friend's daughter is being bullied in middle school by the youth pastor's daughter and the principal's daughter. They've said some truly nasty things and made fun of the friend's daughter incessantly for being overweight, poor and super smart and have really made her life miserable for about a year. The youth pastor and the principal have only paid their daughters' behavior lip service and the girls are still being mean girls.
As a result, I've lost all respect for the youth pastor and the principal. If they can't handle their own daughters, why in the world would anyone trust them with other people's kids? I haven't met this youth pastor, but honestly, I hope I don't. I don't know what I'd say to him except for a snide comment about barefoot shoemaker's children. . .
I'm a minister's daughter myself, and when I was growing up, my parents and my fellow PK's parents all endorsed the idea that we were our own people and our actions shouldn't be used as a judgement of our parents, but they all raised us with the lights of their beliefs.
What this mean was that a little wildness was acceptable (My mother used to actually suggest wild clothing choices to me, and I never had a curfew!) Acting cruelly or meanly would not have been, and not because of their public position, but because they'd publically declared their beliefs and they raised their children by their beliefs. (If I'd ever bullied another girl, my parents would've eaten me for breakfast, lunch and dinner; and I've been lucky if I was allowed out of my room for my 30th birthday!) We were never expected to be perfect, but we were expected to be the products of our parents' teaching about the truly important things, like having respect for others and showing empathy for others.
But then people who are parents tell me that at a certain point, kids have be responsible for themselves and that it may not be all chalked up to what parents "allow" or don't allow.
Just curious - at what age are parents not entirely responsible for their kids' actions, morally? And at what age do you think it's impossible to stop a girl from being a "mean girl"? Also, a completely separate question, but what responsibilities should there be for the kids of people whose profession requires them to be community leaders of high ethical/moral/religious standards? (I don't agree with a lot that the Duggars do, but I think they're handling that line very well, actually!)
I've had discussions with some parents recently. A friend's daughter bullied another girl earlier in the school year. This friend reacted in absolute horror and has been doing everything in her power to keep her daughter from being a mean girl as she gets older, and it seems to be working.
Another friend's daughter is being bullied in middle school by the youth pastor's daughter and the principal's daughter. They've said some truly nasty things and made fun of the friend's daughter incessantly for being overweight, poor and super smart and have really made her life miserable for about a year. The youth pastor and the principal have only paid their daughters' behavior lip service and the girls are still being mean girls.
As a result, I've lost all respect for the youth pastor and the principal. If they can't handle their own daughters, why in the world would anyone trust them with other people's kids? I haven't met this youth pastor, but honestly, I hope I don't. I don't know what I'd say to him except for a snide comment about barefoot shoemaker's children. . .
I'm a minister's daughter myself, and when I was growing up, my parents and my fellow PK's parents all endorsed the idea that we were our own people and our actions shouldn't be used as a judgement of our parents, but they all raised us with the lights of their beliefs.
What this mean was that a little wildness was acceptable (My mother used to actually suggest wild clothing choices to me, and I never had a curfew!) Acting cruelly or meanly would not have been, and not because of their public position, but because they'd publically declared their beliefs and they raised their children by their beliefs. (If I'd ever bullied another girl, my parents would've eaten me for breakfast, lunch and dinner; and I've been lucky if I was allowed out of my room for my 30th birthday!) We were never expected to be perfect, but we were expected to be the products of our parents' teaching about the truly important things, like having respect for others and showing empathy for others.
But then people who are parents tell me that at a certain point, kids have be responsible for themselves and that it may not be all chalked up to what parents "allow" or don't allow.
Just curious - at what age are parents not entirely responsible for their kids' actions, morally? And at what age do you think it's impossible to stop a girl from being a "mean girl"? Also, a completely separate question, but what responsibilities should there be for the kids of people whose profession requires them to be community leaders of high ethical/moral/religious standards? (I don't agree with a lot that the Duggars do, but I think they're handling that line very well, actually!)
Though I do think that he sees the ways we interact in the world and just copies that, but it's still shocking when you've never taught things and your kidlet is doing them.
. It wasn't hard to figure out where her attitude came from.
I guess it's what the parents and the child do after a bad choice is made that really matters.
(ETA my son had behavioral disorders that contributed to his behavior, such as ADHD, ODD and bipolar disorder. But that's not readily evident to people from the outside, and have no idea the years of counseling and medication we went through -- all they saw was a kid behaving badly)
but he seems to be doing well now in the military. In fact he is home now on leave for 28 days before leaving for Japan and we are on day #7 and all is well...
What I'm finding different with her as a teen is that DS would try to push my buttons and I admit that I am short on patience. DD makes every effort NOT to push my buttons and when I lose my temper she makes every attempt to lighten the situation. Geez, I hope it stays that way.
)