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General Parenting
What "tricks" do you have?
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<blockquote data-quote="Calgon_Take_Me_Away" data-source="post: 181451" data-attributes="member: 5645"><p><span style="font-size: 15px">I find it interesting that most say their difficult child is either a really bad liar or they generally don't. We went through a brief stage in which difficult child would tell on himself ~ in kindergarten, he kicked a boy for not sharing the ball during recess. He ran over to the teacher before the other boy did and told her he kicked the boy and why. He had to stand against the wall for a certain amount of time ... the interesting part of that was that easy child 1 stood there with him as if protecting him lol</span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 15px">easy child 1 isn't much into lying and regardless who her "loyalty" is to, she'll rat on the wrong doer. easy child 2 can roll with the best of them as can difficult child. There are certain things that I can't take in for fingerprinting, but I can find something related to the incident. I started the fingerprinting thing when difficult child was getting into tubs of icing in the middle of the night. We'd find it under his bed (he has a loft bed = top bunk only) and he'd tell us it wasn't him. So I'd just quit arguing and getting more upset and turned to fingerprinting. I'm not lying because it's an actual process .... but not revealing that the PD isn't going to run my child's fingerprints over icing lol I guess I feel children (and adults) should be held accountable for their actions and know there are consequences.</span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Calgon_Take_Me_Away, post: 181451, member: 5645"] [SIZE=4]I find it interesting that most say their difficult child is either a really bad liar or they generally don't. We went through a brief stage in which difficult child would tell on himself ~ in kindergarten, he kicked a boy for not sharing the ball during recess. He ran over to the teacher before the other boy did and told her he kicked the boy and why. He had to stand against the wall for a certain amount of time ... the interesting part of that was that easy child 1 stood there with him as if protecting him lol[/SIZE] [SIZE=4][/SIZE] [SIZE=4]easy child 1 isn't much into lying and regardless who her "loyalty" is to, she'll rat on the wrong doer. easy child 2 can roll with the best of them as can difficult child. There are certain things that I can't take in for fingerprinting, but I can find something related to the incident. I started the fingerprinting thing when difficult child was getting into tubs of icing in the middle of the night. We'd find it under his bed (he has a loft bed = top bunk only) and he'd tell us it wasn't him. So I'd just quit arguing and getting more upset and turned to fingerprinting. I'm not lying because it's an actual process .... but not revealing that the PD isn't going to run my child's fingerprints over icing lol I guess I feel children (and adults) should be held accountable for their actions and know there are consequences.[/SIZE] [/QUOTE]
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