rt2dz
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2004
- Messages
- 5,596
It's called different parenting philosophies. It's not someone else's values (rules) are "bad", or even yours are "better". You are raising a different child than they are.
Watching rated R movies or playing violent video games doesn't mean a child will be a thief or violent anymore than staying up later means that any particular kid will have bad grades.
We have rules in our house too. I don't ban my kids from rated R movies at any age. What I do is evaluate the movie first and decide on a case by case basis (kid-- I have 4 kids with different personalities--and movie) if I find it acceptable or not. Same with video games. I have 2 kids that have early bedtimes because they won't go to sleep, but NEED to. One that has no bedtime because he self regulates. And one that has a later bedtime. Some things my younger kids get to do at a much younger age simply because after the oldest (my guinea pig), I see the big picture more easily. Or maybe they do them at a later age. My "dumb" kid is in all AP classes and on the A honor roll. I have no clue on any given day if he has homework or a test. I don't need to know; he handles it all just fine. Two others have Mensa IQs and I'm constantly needing to ask one about homework and tests and check to make sure it's done (just ask). The other with a very high IQ requires me to actually sit there next to him to make sure he is doing it and doing it correctly. I know three do a great job of picking "good" friends and the fourth requires that I'm involved because otherwise he may pick kids that aren't the best to be friends with. Etc, etc, etc
Life isn't black and white, but shades of gray. It's best to make sure you don't wear your judge-y pants.
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Watching rated R movies or playing violent video games doesn't mean a child will be a thief or violent anymore than staying up later means that any particular kid will have bad grades.
We have rules in our house too. I don't ban my kids from rated R movies at any age. What I do is evaluate the movie first and decide on a case by case basis (kid-- I have 4 kids with different personalities--and movie) if I find it acceptable or not. Same with video games. I have 2 kids that have early bedtimes because they won't go to sleep, but NEED to. One that has no bedtime because he self regulates. And one that has a later bedtime. Some things my younger kids get to do at a much younger age simply because after the oldest (my guinea pig), I see the big picture more easily. Or maybe they do them at a later age. My "dumb" kid is in all AP classes and on the A honor roll. I have no clue on any given day if he has homework or a test. I don't need to know; he handles it all just fine. Two others have Mensa IQs and I'm constantly needing to ask one about homework and tests and check to make sure it's done (just ask). The other with a very high IQ requires me to actually sit there next to him to make sure he is doing it and doing it correctly. I know three do a great job of picking "good" friends and the fourth requires that I'm involved because otherwise he may pick kids that aren't the best to be friends with. Etc, etc, etc
Life isn't black and white, but shades of gray. It's best to make sure you don't wear your judge-y pants.
Sent from my iPad using DISBoards