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General Parenting
I wish they wouldn't
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<blockquote data-quote="SuZir" data-source="post: 565353" data-attributes="member: 14557"><p>This is so true. Very often the attitude of teachers and providers is: your child is difficult and disruptive to me, fix it. Do they really think, that we just enjoy so much about our kids being difficult and disruptive that we just for the sheer joy of it decline to push that button at our difficult children' necks that would make them 'normal' and easy and delightful PCs?</p><p></p><p>That kind of reminds me of my difficult child when he was three. When easy child was fussing, difficult child with exact same tone as all those adults later, told me to sing easy child a 'lulla lulla' (his name for a lullaby I used to sing them often.) He did expect that to make easy child to just stop fussing and go to sleep. Totally understandable logic when you are difficult child and all three long years old. Little bit odd, when you have your masters in early education and you are 35 years old.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SuZir, post: 565353, member: 14557"] This is so true. Very often the attitude of teachers and providers is: your child is difficult and disruptive to me, fix it. Do they really think, that we just enjoy so much about our kids being difficult and disruptive that we just for the sheer joy of it decline to push that button at our difficult children' necks that would make them 'normal' and easy and delightful PCs? That kind of reminds me of my difficult child when he was three. When easy child was fussing, difficult child with exact same tone as all those adults later, told me to sing easy child a 'lulla lulla' (his name for a lullaby I used to sing them often.) He did expect that to make easy child to just stop fussing and go to sleep. Totally understandable logic when you are difficult child and all three long years old. Little bit odd, when you have your masters in early education and you are 35 years old. [/QUOTE]
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