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The Watercooler
And we think we're strict
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<blockquote data-quote="Lothlorien" data-source="post: 400743" data-attributes="member: 1024"><p>I tried piano lessons with Missy. I'm surprised the plastic Samsun Keyboard we have isn't in splinters. As it is, the girl that used to be my mother's helper had a phone, Legos and other things thrown at her while she tried to help Missy practice her lessons. Her lessons lasted all of about 5 weeks. It is very obvious her children are not difficult children. With Missy, the keyboard would be destroyed, then the room, then the dog and possibly Mighty or anyone else who got in the way.</p><p> </p><p>OTH, if I had that type of parenting with Mighty Mouse, perhaps it might work. He is a completely different child. Sure, he's obstinate and loves video games, but if I pushed him that way, he'd succeed, but I have no idea how he'd react if I obviously dont' treat Missy the same. That's the problem. Treating one child differently than the other. The whole psyche thing goes haywire.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lothlorien, post: 400743, member: 1024"] I tried piano lessons with Missy. I'm surprised the plastic Samsun Keyboard we have isn't in splinters. As it is, the girl that used to be my mother's helper had a phone, Legos and other things thrown at her while she tried to help Missy practice her lessons. Her lessons lasted all of about 5 weeks. It is very obvious her children are not difficult children. With Missy, the keyboard would be destroyed, then the room, then the dog and possibly Mighty or anyone else who got in the way. OTH, if I had that type of parenting with Mighty Mouse, perhaps it might work. He is a completely different child. Sure, he's obstinate and loves video games, but if I pushed him that way, he'd succeed, but I have no idea how he'd react if I obviously dont' treat Missy the same. That's the problem. Treating one child differently than the other. The whole psyche thing goes haywire. [/QUOTE]
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