People who assume that you are not allowed to have an informed opinion unless you have raised a teenager annoy me.YAWN. Parents who don't have teenagers but know it all annoy me.
People who assume that you are not allowed to have an informed opinion unless you have raised a teenager annoy me.YAWN. Parents who don't have teenagers but know it all annoy me.
While I don't disagree with the privacy issue per se, I also know that teens have no problems invading other people's privacy. Its only 'their' privacy that usually comes into play!
Honestly, the assumptions made in the OP continue to bother me.I spotted an inexpensive cookie jar at the store the other day and decided against buying it, but told my husband about it after I came home. He went the next day and bought it, and hid it in our 17 yr old daughter's closet, to wrap later for a Christmas gift for me.
For reasons known only to her, our daughter just came into the kitchen and asked why it was in a bag in her closet, naming exactly what the item was. Now, she knew perfectly well it was a gift, as we have been hiding gifts for each other in our childrens' closets for years and she is well aware of it. I am certain she was reasonably sure that it was a gift for me. She was pissed off that her father put it in her room without discussing it with her (she was at work when he brought it home) so she purposely and intentionally ruined the surprise of the gift he had purchased for me.
FTR, I am not upset about knowing about the gift ahead of time. I was 100% sure when I told him about it that he would go and buy it, and really, how excited is somebody going to get about a $15 cookie jar? I am however really steamed that she intentionally ruined her father's surprise for me. It was one little add on gift that he knew I would like and I think that he is hurt that she would deliberately ruin his surprise.
I am pissed off with her for being such a brat, and if I am going to be really honest, my feelings are hurt too, because she did it purposely because she knew it was my gift.
It's stupid, it's just a little gift, but I am really just feeling sad because it just seemed so hateful.
Sorry, but I don't feel sorry for you. Im sure it has something to do with her being almost 18 years old and not having her privacy respected. Is there no where else in your house that you could hide presents other than snooping around in her closet (what she felt, I'm sure).
Honestly, the assumptions made in the OP continue to bother me.
The OP is mad because her daughter asked her why there was a cookie jar in her closet. No one previously mentioned it to her, so she had no clue that her father put it there and it was a gift for her mother. The rest of that post is all conjecture and accusation.
YAWN. Parent that treat their children like prisoners of their home annoy me. Yes, they are your children, but its your JOB to teach them respect - and that means you actually have to show them the respect that you might ask back in return. It doesn't give you carte blanche to keep them under your thumb just because you can. If you don't want them rifling around in your business, stay out of theirs, unless they have shown you that they can't be trusted with that kind of privacy.
I have children - I give my 6 year old more respect than you are affording your teenagers (who are almost a ADULTS). I don't buy that 'MY HOUSE!!!!' stuff. They live there too. Just plain rude.
Honestly, the assumptions made in the OP continue to bother me.
The OP is mad because her daughter asked her why there was a cookie jar in her closet. No one previously mentioned it to her, so she had no clue that her father put it there and it was a gift for her mother. The rest of that post is all conjecture and accusation.
Sorry, but I don't feel sorry for you. Im sure it has something to do with her being almost 18 years old and not having her privacy respected. Is there no where else in your house that you could hide presents other than snooping around in her closet (what she felt, I'm sure).
Honestly, the assumptions made in the OP continue to bother me.
The OP is mad because her daughter asked her why there was a cookie jar in her closet. No one previously mentioned it to her, so she had no clue that her father put it there and it was a gift for her mother. The rest of that post is all conjecture and accusation.
This thread is not about her teen's past behavior. It is about the situation that was described in the OP. Based on the OP's description of that interaction, her assumptions are unfounded, even if the daughter had attitude.I don't think they are WILD accusations. This is her DD she is talking about...Not some random roomate. I'm willing to ASSUME she knows her DD pretty well and isbeing honest when she says how bratty her daughter was when she brought it up.
Your princess is only 2, but guess what? She will be a teenager someday.![]()
Honestly, the assumptions made in the OP continue to bother me.
The OP is mad because her daughter asked her why there was a cookie jar in her closet. No one previously mentioned it to her, so she had no clue that her father put it there and it was a gift for her mother. The rest of that post is all conjecture and accusation.
I'm thinking that your memory of raising a 2yo is getting foggy.It's very, very easy to parent 2 and 6 year old girls.
THIS... exactly....
There is just no way most teenaged girls would be comfortable with her dad poking thru her closet.
Sounds like a good re-adjustment of ideas about privacy and personal boundaries might be a good idea for all parties here!
The OP stated that they usually ask her daughter before hiding items in her closet and failed to do so this time. Therefore, it appears that it is not 'understood' that this will happen. What is understood, based on past actions, is that she will be asked prior to items being hidden in her closet.The OP said they put surprise gifts for each other in the daughter's closet, kinda understood by the family. Maybe the kid oughta get a clue.![]()
Putting a bag in a closet is not the same as poking through her closet. Not even close.
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The OP stated that they usually ask her daughter before hiding items in her closet and failed to do so this time. Therefore, it appears that it is not 'understood' that this will happen. What is understood, based on past actions, is that she will be asked prior to items being hidden in her closet.