October 2014 Moms

---UO---

135

Re: ---UO---

  • Loading the player...
  • Nicb13 said:
    So re:cio, my thing is: it isn't necessary for all babies!! And when dd1 was little it just felt wrong to me and all of dhs friends and colleagues were going on and on about how we had to sleep train her bc she wasn't sttn at 4 months old. She also wasn't gaining weight very quickly (low end of normal), so clearly cutting out two of her feedings per day didn't seem like a good idea to me. And I was the one dealing with it. Everyone said that if we didn't st, she wouldn't sttn...ever. Bullshit. My UO is that most kids will sttn when they are ready, sleep training or not. It might not be at 6 months. It might not be at 1 year. But it will happen without you having to ignore your screaming child.

    Well call me selfish but I'm not going to wait until my kid feels he/she is "ready" or have a kid that is over a year old and still not STTN. If I can do something to move things along that won't ruin him/her for life then you bet your ass that's what I'm going to do. Letting your LO cry for a few nights to learn to sleep better is not a big deal IMO.
    This is sort of unrelated, but while reading this, I was reminded of another UO.

    People say to wait until your kid is "ready" to potty train. And I understand that. But. Then. Why is it that so many people say "oh, my kid was potty trained at 1 (or 2)" and those people are like, in their 50s, and then I hear so many people who are my age and hunger who have kids who are 4 in diapers?

    It seemed like just doing it worked back then. But then, I feel like somewhere there's a thing where if they aren't ready it's supposed to be damaging to them in some way? Maybe that's true and that's why I am the way I am, who knows?
    image
    image
    image
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • SPurp13 said:
    Sometimes I am shocked at the things that are not flamed here (or even get a reaction) that would 150% be flamed elsewhere. 


    Ok, I am sure people are going to jump my ass for this, but here goes: I find it interesting that you would say this because sometimes you say things that I think people would react to and they don't and I am amazed that people just let it slide.  Now I know that usually you say really helpful and informative things and people (including me) respect that.  And I think that is why they let it slide when you say things that come off as more abrasive than necessary.  I agree with Purp, I think it is because with regulars it is easier to just let things go and not make a big deal about it.  Generally, that is the position I take.  I am not going to start some shit because generally I agree with the things you say.  But I do think people let things you say slide a lot. 

    I should clarify: not really flame worthy opinions, just the way you say things to people. 

    I agree with the above.

    There is a softer side to GDF that I think gets lost sometimes in the way things are worded. I'm blunt as fuck, too. I get it. But sometimes, I swear, it's like two different people posting. Sometimes everything's super playful, and I enjoy it. But then other times, it's very authoritative and blunt. And there's a need for both. I do get that. But on a board that often fluffs what we say and apologizes for opinions, it sticks out. No one says it. Because reg.

    Actually, I think GDF is silly and playful on the FB. It's like night and day. I mean, don't apologize for being authoritative and blunt and smart ever. But I want you to be stupid sometimes. Just say something nonsensical. People get lady boners for Science GDF. I am the opposite.

    Maybe my real UO is that sometimes, I'm like "dude, we get it, you're super smart and successful," and I sit on my side of the screen and eat my feelings in gummy bears.

    Hey, in a related note, I'm working with my therapist about feelings of inadequacy when comparing myself to others. (How's that for a segue?)
    On the flip side, no one should have to dumb themselves down to make anyone else feel better about themselves.
    I don't think she should.

    I think I actually do this, though.
    image
    image
    image
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • SPurp13 said:
    Sometimes I feel like "experts" tell us what is and what isn't damaging to kids.

    And the truth is, sometimes, kids are just assholes.

    I know this, because I'm fairly certain nothing my mom did to me as a baby screwed me up. I'm just an asshole.*





    *She screwed me up later, but not as a wee baby.

    ETA: I shouldn't have split the first two into paragraphs, because it sounds like I'm sure kids are just assholes. It meant to say "Sometimes I feel like....kids are just assholes."
    I'm not sure even the experts know enough to say that some of these things definitively harm or help a person (not a child - a person - like follow them into adulthood and tell me the negative effects X had on them).

    But at the same time, so much of it is the specific child and specific parent.  We come with specific pre-wiring thanks to nature, and nurture can set it off, turn it on, amplify it, subdue it, or do whatever the hell it does.  There are few things (with the exception of things like sleeping on tummy leads to increased risk of SIDS) that we know definitively apply to all babies and infants in the same way.  And I think even with SIDS some experts are now exploring the possibility of there being an underlying brain stem issue, which would mean some babies could handle it while others couldn't.  Again, differs from one baby to another.

    Plus, we are all fucked up to a certain degree.  None of us are perfect.  I wouldn't even go as far as to say, "I turned out okay." - because how the hell do I even judge that?  Can we look at everything that's wrong with us, every insecurity, every bad habit, and attribute it to something our parents did?  Maybe, maybe not.  Regardless, the cycle is going to repeat itself and in 30 years our children will be sitting here having the same conversation we are, but maybe the red button topics will be a bit different.

    I do believe we can over protect and over shelter our children.  I believe that comes from a good place, but when it comes from a place of OMG I KNOW THAT EVERYTHING WILL BE FINE FOR MY CHILD AND THEY WILL BE PERFECT BECAUSE I DID X, Y, & Z, that person is setting them self up for disappointment.  We can give our children the tools that WE think they will need to succeed, but those tools may be slightly different for each child, and no parent is going to be able to know exactly which tools and to which degree their child will need them.  Not to mention the fact that "success" and "I turned out okay/great/fantastic/I'm awesome." are all subjective.  
    Yes. To all of it.
    =D>





          image         image


  • Homeschooling is completely and 100% for us (or so I think now, we'll see what happens).  DH and I were both homeschooled, and we turned out just fine.  I'm so thankful I was homeschooled and I loved it.  I wouldn't have it any other way.  And I am beyond stoked and excited to homeschool our children.
    I don't think there is anything wrong with homeschooling, but I do think that kids need to be involved in activities outside of the home to learn life lessons - they won't always win, they can't always have it their way, sharing, accepting other ways of doing something, etc.

    I could never home-school because I would suck at it. A lot.
    I hate that homeschooling has gotten to be so easy for some and isn't taken seriously. For example, I had cousins that quit publicschool in 5th grade and 10th grade to be "home-schooled." Their parents never taught them anything and the state couldn't do anything about it because they filed all of the correct paperwork. 

    Also, my step mom just let my little sister quit high school in the middle of her SENIOR YEAR so she could be home-schooled. Because she got an F in one class and decided she was embarrassed and didn't want to go back.

    My step mom travels around with her boyfriend of the month because he thinks he's going to be a famous country singer. Sooo I'm sure she isn't really going to teach her anything. I'm so pissed she let my sister ruin her last year of high school.
  • @SPurp13 - The reason for waiting until a kid is ready to potty train really is more for the parent than the child. If you try to potty train before they are ready you will spend many weeks or months of accidents and frustration. If you wait until they are ready, the process will be much easier. However, if the kid is 4 and not potty trained, the parent definitely missed the boat.
    Lilypie Pregnancy tickers
    Me: 38 DH: 36
    Married 8/27/2011
    BFP #1 9/28/2011 DS born 5/22/2012
    BFP #2 4/24/2013 m/c 4/25/2013 at 4w
    BFP #3 1/31/2014 DD born 10/14/2014
    BFP #4 1/20/2016 m/c 2/12/2014 at 7w2d
    BFP #5 8/19/2016 DS2 born 4/29/2017
    BFP #6 3/7/2018 EDD 11/18/2018


  • People put the baby in the car seat to shower???
  • edited January 2015
    andrieya said:
    People put the baby in the car seat to shower???
    I know people who bring the bouncer in the bathroom, but not the car seat! 
    Loss Blog (finally updated)

     image

     imageimage
    image
    5 cycles of "TTC" - 3 intentional, 2 not so intentional.  5 BFPs.  My rainbow arrived 10/15/14.
    TFMC 08.02.13 at 19+ weeks. Everyday I grieve for my little Olive.

  • vrj0522 said:
    @SPurp13 - The reason for waiting until a kid is ready to potty train really is more for the parent than the child. If you try to potty train before they are ready you will spend many weeks or months of accidents and frustration. If you wait until they are ready, the process will be much easier. However, if the kid is 4 and not potty trained, the parent definitely missed the boat.
    I've never potty trained so I don't know, but I thought that a child can actually regress if they are potty trained too early?  
    Loss Blog (finally updated)

     image

     imageimage
    image
    5 cycles of "TTC" - 3 intentional, 2 not so intentional.  5 BFPs.  My rainbow arrived 10/15/14.
    TFMC 08.02.13 at 19+ weeks. Everyday I grieve for my little Olive.

  • vrj0522 said:
    @SPurp13 - The reason for waiting until a kid is ready to potty train really is more for the parent than the child. If you try to potty train before they are ready you will spend many weeks or months of accidents and frustration. If you wait until they are ready, the process will be much easier. However, if the kid is 4 and not potty trained, the parent definitely missed the boat.
    I've never potty trained so I don't know, but I thought that a child can actually regress if they are potty trained too early?  
    Setting an arbitrary age for potty training is so difficult for me to understand. I'm sure it is because my daughter is who 3 years old and some change is still not potty trained - and it is not for lack of trying on our part. She just won't do it. The other day, she peed 2x in the toilet willingly, and since then - nothing. I cannot get her to do it consistently. I still take her to the potty, remind her we need to try, offer incentives, let her be diaper-free, let her wear undies, bribes, stickers, gummy bears, you name it, I've tried it. What else am I supposed to do?!





          image         image


  • I don't get homeschooling. I didn't have one teacher for all subjects. I don't think a single person can be enough of an expert in all subjects to teach them well. I think it is irresponsible to not let your child learn things from someone who spent time learning not only the subject but also how to teach it. Like, I got an A in quantum mechanics. But I couldn't explain that shit to anyone. So what makes random-mom qualified to teach biology and chemistry and history and English and algebra?
    good points.





          image         image


  • vrj0522 said:
    @SPurp13 - The reason for waiting until a kid is ready to potty train really is more for the parent than the child. If you try to potty train before they are ready you will spend many weeks or months of accidents and frustration. If you wait until they are ready, the process will be much easier. However, if the kid is 4 and not potty trained, the parent definitely missed the boat.
    I've never potty trained so I don't know, but I thought that a child can actually regress if they are potty trained too early?  
    Definitely. Even children who are potty trained when ready can have regressions but it's more likely if the kid was not really ready. 
    Lilypie Pregnancy tickers
    Me: 38 DH: 36
    Married 8/27/2011
    BFP #1 9/28/2011 DS born 5/22/2012
    BFP #2 4/24/2013 m/c 4/25/2013 at 4w
    BFP #3 1/31/2014 DD born 10/14/2014
    BFP #4 1/20/2016 m/c 2/12/2014 at 7w2d
    BFP #5 8/19/2016 DS2 born 4/29/2017
    BFP #6 3/7/2018 EDD 11/18/2018


  • @SPurp13‌ I lol'd at your baby thinking she's going on a drive but instead goes to the bathroom
    image
    image
  • Ooh I have a UO.

    I hate when people present an idea and use blogs or random websites as their source...

    I could start my own website today called - www.howtoliveyourlifewithoutevergettinganydisease.com
    and some moron out there would believe everything I say.

    Blogs are not evidence of anything.

    I wasn't posting that link as evidence to why I was right, just as an article that changed my opinion of something.






    image
    *January Siggy Challenge - Snow Fails*

    image




    imageimageimage

  • re: homeschool

    A lot of times when homeschool kids reach high school courses they go to classes or co-ops with other homeschool kids taught by someone who is more of an expert in that area. Sometimes it's a current or former educator. Or they follow curriculum written by experts and their parents are more of a guide, rather than an instructor.
    image


    imageimageimage
  • Wasn't there talk on the board a long time ago about a parenting style that doesn't use the word "no"?

    This still baffles me.
    Bahaha. That's one of the most ridiculous things I've ever heard. What do they say instead?! Or do they just give them everything they want?
    Right? I think not making your child share was also talked about. Two concepts I am not on board with at all.





          image         image


  • Nicb13 said:
    Wasn't there talk on the board a long time ago about a parenting style that doesn't use the word "no"?

    This still baffles me.
    Bahaha. That's one of the most ridiculous things I've ever heard. What do they say instead?! Or do they just give them everything they want?

    Kids get used to hearing "no" and like all other things...they start to block you out. Experts do recommend that parents use a word other than "no" but fuck, that's not always easy!

    I also read some article that said parents use the phrase "good job" too much with their kids and they shouldn't say it so often. Fuck. We can't do anything right.

    I can understand using other verbiage besides just "no", or finding ways to explain why they can't do it..but if I'm recalling correctly, someone shared an article along the lines of how using the word no stifles a child or something to that effect.

    8-|





          image         image


  • Nicb13 said:

    Mmmmm

    image
    I'm debating between Sour Patch Kids or a glass of wine.






    image
    *January Siggy Challenge - Snow Fails*

    image




    imageimageimage

This discussion has been closed.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards
"
"