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Parent Support Forums
General Parenting
Approaching Parents about their child. HELP!
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<blockquote data-quote="SRL" data-source="post: 84184" data-attributes="member: 701"><p>Hi Galactucus, welcome to our forum.</p><p></p><p>You can bet that KidX's incident wasn't isolated and that the mother has been dealing with this all along. From the wording I gather the mother wasn't denying her son had the feces problem neither was she accusing your son in this incident. She was likely just covering the possibility that your son would tell you what had happened. </p><p></p><p>Your choices here are fairly limited:</p><p>1) Cut off them playing together, with or without explanation to the parent. </p><p>2) Let the boys play together in totally supervised situations. in my opinion, two four year old friends probably shouldn't have been in the bathtub together without constant adult supervision. </p><p></p><p>If you do decide to talk with the parent, keep it focused on your son and not hers. Put it in the context that you were uncomfortable with them bathing together and that your son was uncomfortable with the BM business. This probably isn't a time or set of circumstance for you to be suggesting her son has a problem, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SRL, post: 84184, member: 701"] Hi Galactucus, welcome to our forum. You can bet that KidX's incident wasn't isolated and that the mother has been dealing with this all along. From the wording I gather the mother wasn't denying her son had the feces problem neither was she accusing your son in this incident. She was likely just covering the possibility that your son would tell you what had happened. Your choices here are fairly limited: 1) Cut off them playing together, with or without explanation to the parent. 2) Let the boys play together in totally supervised situations. in my opinion, two four year old friends probably shouldn't have been in the bathtub together without constant adult supervision. If you do decide to talk with the parent, keep it focused on your son and not hers. Put it in the context that you were uncomfortable with them bathing together and that your son was uncomfortable with the BM business. This probably isn't a time or set of circumstance for you to be suggesting her son has a problem, etc. [/QUOTE]
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Approaching Parents about their child. HELP!
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