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The Watercooler
Another easy child 2 question
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<blockquote data-quote="'Chelle" data-source="post: 260817" data-attributes="member: 1161"><p>I don't think you screwed up. Your easy child is getting to the age where she knows and understands a lot more things about what's going on. You were straightforward and truthful, didn't try put the other side down, were just supplying her with the info she'd asked for.</p><p></p><p>I'm like Trinity. My kids things are their things. They can generally take them where ever they want, with the stipulation that they ask first so that I know what's leaving the house and can check when they get home to make sure it gets back home. I have said no if it's not an appropriate place to have the thing they want, but to take it to aunt's, grandma's, friends, I have no problem. I think your easy child's mom may find herself having a problem, in that easy child'll start to resent the no you can't, and take what ever anyway, lying in the process. I feel it's best to have your child learn the responsibility for their things, being honest, rather than they try to find ways around a parent telling them no.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="'Chelle, post: 260817, member: 1161"] I don't think you screwed up. Your easy child is getting to the age where she knows and understands a lot more things about what's going on. You were straightforward and truthful, didn't try put the other side down, were just supplying her with the info she'd asked for. I'm like Trinity. My kids things are their things. They can generally take them where ever they want, with the stipulation that they ask first so that I know what's leaving the house and can check when they get home to make sure it gets back home. I have said no if it's not an appropriate place to have the thing they want, but to take it to aunt's, grandma's, friends, I have no problem. I think your easy child's mom may find herself having a problem, in that easy child'll start to resent the no you can't, and take what ever anyway, lying in the process. I feel it's best to have your child learn the responsibility for their things, being honest, rather than they try to find ways around a parent telling them no. [/QUOTE]
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