Tuesday 31 March 2020

How did you decide your children's names?


Posted with permission from my children.I'm a proud papa of 5, all of whom are budding etymologists. My youngest son always liked getting told his "name story" when he was stressed as a little one, and we've sort of reverted to that now that we're all cooped up and under so much stress. I wanted to share my kids's "name stories" and if any of you guys wanted to share too, that'd be super interesting.Our eldest is Josephine Indigo. She was originally going to be Marjorie Morrissey, but my ex-wife ended up reading "Little Women" while she was pregnant and wanted our daughter to have that strength and confidence. She goes by Jo these days, and has the spirit to match her namesake. We didn't really decide on Indigo until a few days after she was born. It was Josephine Morrissey on the birth certificate until my mother-in-law brought us a book about the rainbow, and we flipped through it, and Indigo just sounded right for our girl. I've always been a little bit granola with my name choices, the kids don't mind, though.Our twins are Cosima Rose and Ripley Fox. We had this feeling that it would be boy/boy the entire pregnancy, and planned on Cosmo Hunt and Ripley Fox. Then, out pops girl/boy and we had to reshuffle a little bit. We were already pretty married to Cosmo, and Cosima being the feminine form worked so perfectly. We gave her the middle name Rose after my mother's favorite flower. Ripley was named after Robert Ripley, of Ripley's Believe It or Not. My dad collected the books and comics for a long time, so we decided to honor him there. And Fox just came out of no where.Then, we have MacKenzie Morgan - the plainest of our naming choices, but one of the most colorful kids on the planet. We felt that we'd picked very gendered names with our other three, and wanted something really neutral, something that he could grow into. We knew that MacKenzie was mostly a girl's name, but it just spoke to us. Now that he's older, he hates to be called MacKenzie and mostly goes by Morgan - which we pulled out of a baby name book. Morgan's name is the only one I really, truly regret, just because he can't stand it now.Our (4 yr. old) baby is Juno Leigh. Her name has always been very simple to us - we found mythology to be a great inspiration to us, and everybody really loved Juno. We thought about Hera, but we could never connect to it the same way that we did with Juno. Leigh was the middle name of my late sister in law, who passed away very shortly before Juno came into our lives, so we chose to honor her and give her a connection to our daughter in that way.How did you name your kids? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Uzkwev

Should I play along ??


My four year old absolutely loves to play pretend and mostly by feeding me a script. All day long she is feeding me lines that she wants me to repeat. I get so fed up with it that I have to say I'm taking a break right now. She has me say all sorts of things and sometimes wants me to pretend that the dolls are fighting and calling each other stupid, cry baby etc. We of course don't allow name calling. Should I go alone with it or say this is inappropriate ?? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2xEhsVg

We never had any problems with our son until he turned 10. Now he's being defiant and disrespectful to us


My son has always been a good kid, and I still think he is a good kid deep down. I'm assuming the stuff he's doing right now is a phase, but it's tough. He's our only child so we don't know if this is an age thing or the way he's going to be from now on. He's doing things like calling us names, shoving us and rough housing, playing cruel games pretending to be hurt among other things. Some days he acts like he doesn't like me anymore and won't speak to me or hug me, then other days he acts like he doesn't like his dad. He'll say things like "I like mom better, I don't love you anymore" and hug me in front of dad to "make him jealous." Then on a different day he will do the same and say "I like dad better."He gets lots of attention so I don't think it's that. We've had to take away Playstation privileges for the first time ever this week.Is this part of the pre-teen stage and can you relate? Thanks! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2wVAdU2

Kids!!


Does anyone else's kids have no interest in them until they are busy? My kids can entertain themselves like champs until I need to get something done. Then suddenly they want to cuddle and play a game and want all of my attention doing things i offered to do with them before I was busy! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/33Y2BRK

Avoidant father


My husband has always avoided child care duties. My daughter is 3 and right now my husband is only working 2 days a week. I have told him that when he’s home I want him to watch her for at least two hours of the day. But he will do anything to avoid being around her and makes excuses day in and day out. “I don’t know what to do” “she wants to watch tv” “I have to wash dishes”. No, dishes don’t need to be washed in those two hours you are with her. There are dozens of activities we have within eye sight of the living room that she loves to do. He will find any chore to do in the house to distract himself from being with our daughter and it’s really bewildering to me. None of these things need to be done in those two hours I set for him and yet all of a sudden it’s of utmost importance and my daughter ends up coming to me because “daddy’s busy”. Spending time with our kid is at the top of my list of things a man should do to show he cares. I’ve told him this enough times that he knows this. And this is telling me he does not care. I’m disappointed on a weekly basis and I don’t know what to do anymore. I have tried everything. I’ve given him literal lists of things he could do with her. I’ve already reached my breaking point. I need time to myself because I spend all my time thinking of things to do with my child and I just want this guy to help and do something of his own volition for once. I’m imploding and he doesn’t give a fuck. How do I make him give a fuck? Should I just die so he learns how to take care of a child? I seriously just want to see him learn even if it requires my actual death. I just can’t stand seeing someone who is so careless. It makes me loathe his existence. I’ve asked people before and they said leave the house for a day. Well can’t really do that now can I? Maybe I will though because I’m desperate. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3bE3cur

My son had a horrible nightmare last night


Last night, my son (13), woke me up sobbing and trembling. He told me that he had a nightmare, like a really really bad one. He asked if he could sleep with me, I of corse let him. I’ve literally never been that physically close to someone. I just held him as tight as I possibly could. This morning, he wouldn’t talk about it at all. He absolutely refuses to talk about it.He uses to tell his mom everything, he hasn’t been able to since she passed. How can I get him know he can talk to me? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2yrV1Dn

We’ve started online learning this week. My second grader is in dual immersion.


ALL OF THE ASSIGNMENTS I NEED TO HELP HIM WITH ARE IN SPANISH. I only speak English. I’ve been trying to use google translate to decipher his school work, but that only helps so much. Any one have tips to help?! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3ayt3nB

Taking care of a six month old while working from home


Okay so it’s been a few weeks of WFH for most of us. Tell me what’s working for you guys as parents working at home while taking care of your infants/kids. My husband and I both work 8-5 office jobs. My mom has been taking care of our baby but it might not be the case very soon. How do we balance our jobs and taking care of an infant? Tips? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/340zqxd

Daughter pretending to be sick


We have been staying inside for 3 weeks now. My husband is the only one who goes out to get groceries and always makes sure to wash when he gets home. I had been cooking and cleaning more than usual during the day and my 18 month old was angry at me apparently. Our kitchen and living room are in the same space so she was not left unattended. She started coughing and sneezing for hours, no fever, eating normal. I was so worried. Later I realised she had watched one of those kids videos on YouTube where the baby is sick and mommy and daddy take care of him. We snuggled with her the rest if the evening and magically she was cured. Now any time she wants some extra attention she will start caughing or sneezing. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2JtjlqH

My partner just gave birth to our first child! Help!


So my partner just gave birth to our first child. The delivery didn't go that smooth. After a day and a half in the hospital we decided to diliver the baby through a C-section. As soon as our baby was born the doctor noticed some trouble with her breathing. Right now the baby and my partner are doing fine, but my anxiety is still through the roof. Will this get better over time? I never felt anything like this and I am starting to get kind of scared...any advice is very welcome.Ps. Sorry for bad English post is coming from the Netherlands via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3ayHnMN

Sleeping thru the night?


I'm throwing our scenario out there to see if anyone has dealt with something similar. We have an 18 month old and was doing great with sleeping. He'd go down around 7:30 and sleep until 5-6am. Some nights he'd wake and we'd go in, cover him back up and he'd pass right back out. Nothing major. It seems since he can't go to daycare because of the issues going on nationwide, his sleep training is completely out the window. He'll go to sleep just fine and we're lucky if he's not awake screaming 2 hours later. He hasn't slept thru the night since and is waking up every few hours. We've tried to keep his schedule as close to his daycare schedule as possible. Just wondering if anyone else is dealing with the regression? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Uv8CSQ

1 Year old Twins - transitioning to solid foods. How to "discipline" when refusing to eat?


Daycare's been closed for 3 weeks now and we're home w/ our kids full time.Our twin girls are 54 weeks old. We've already transitioned from baby bottles to sippy cup. still drinking about 12 ounces of formula a day but trying to convert that to milk. They eat 3 meals in their high chair a day, and get about 2 to 3 snacks. We've been observing that they've been increasingly picky. They love crap food right now, like pasta, bread and rice. We try to hide healthy food inside stuff we make, for example, zucchini pancakes with pork inside. we also make chickpea pasta instead of regular pasta, etc.We try to offer 2-3 options and put one thing at a time on their high chairs. sometimes they will refuse to try it, cry at the sight of it, and then throw it on the ground. Other things, if we put it on a fork for them, they will eat. We don't scream or scold if they throw stuff on the ground but we just say "no drop". I dont think that's been helping at all because they still do it. This has been the main stress of this whole formula to real food transition. We give them the bottle three times a day currently transitioning from formula to whole milk. once at wake up, once after lunch/before nap, and one right after dinner at bedtime.​Main questions: Should we just let a kid "skip" that meal if they throw everything on the floor ? Should we accomodate them and give them something they like (cheerios, or other prepackaged stuff which we've really been trying to avoid that they get fed at day care like veggie sticks, graham crackers, etc. )do we be persistant and keep offering the food they refused to try in the first place? Our pediatrician basically said to just let them skip the meal, "starve" them if you will and they will eat when they're hungry. I am not sure how long the timeline we should do this should be. I dont want to end up having to feed the kids only one thing (e.g. chicken nuggets only which a friend does).Do they just get over throwing food off their table? "No drop, kiddos!" doesn't work at all. its hard not to express any emotion sometimes we do but make it a point not to. meal times are incredibly stressful for the both of us. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2UxAmq3

14 month old kicking and hitting....what do I do?


He only kicks during diaper changes, thinks it's so funny, and sometimes it is, but I never laugh so as not to encourage him. But he also has been throwing things at my face, VERY hard, even brought me to tears a couple nights ago. He could tell something was wrong, but not that he caused it....at least I dont think he knew he hurt me. My husband says I'm gonna have to start spanking him, I say no way in hell will anyone put their hands on our son, including him.But I have no tools to deal with this, I'm a first time mom. What can I do to help him put the two things together, his actions and their consequences? He is not talking yet, but understands what we say. If I tell him to throw away a diaper, he does it. Pick up toys, he does it. If I say no or stop? He acts like he has no idea what I've said. I'm at a loss. Help me! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3bCinnZ

Son (11) doesn't play with his sister (9) anymore


To put things into perspective, I'm a single father (35) of two kids. Their mother is out of the picture, so it's usually just us. Since a few days, almost a week before the start of this new "outbreak", my son begun distancing a bit from his sister. They have always been the kind to do everything together; play games, watch movies, swimming, etc. Even at school I know they sometimes spend time together during breaks.​Cut to a few days ago, and I start to notice some different patterns. First was one day after we all arrived home, I was going to watch some TV and my daughter invited her brother to watch a movie to her room. He said that he would go later, but I noticed he never came out of his room until dinner that night. Situations like this where she would ask him to do things together but he declined kept arising, and I started to get worried if something could have happened. My daughter looks heartbroken, she doesn't understand if she did something wrong to make him angry. And when I try to talk with my son he either avoids the issue or says that everything is fine.​Nowadays, for obvious reasons we are spending a lot more time at home, and living like this has become impossible, with it being evident that for some reason he is avoiding her. I don't want to force anything, I just want them to get along again, like they always did. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2ygzUn8

SOS Separation Anxiety


Our 5 month old, breastfed baby has horrible separation anxiety. I cannot even be next to someone else holding her to calm her down. Even her own father just gets non stop screams until I can hold her again or she falls asleep. I know that preferring mom is common in babies this age, and especially so for breastfeed babies, but I didn't know it could be this extreme. Is our only option to just wait out the phase, or are there things we can do to ease her extreme discomfort? I love my baby, but being the only one who can soothe her is a daunting role to be in, and it makes me feel a lot of guilt for little things like taking a shower or cooking dinner. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Uyboqc

6mo daughter is a terrible sleeper


She's actually 5 and a half months old and ever since she turned 4 months old she went from being an unbelievably good sleeper to an awful one. Not the worst, but enough to drive my wife and I insane.She's wakes up crying every hour or so. It's quite easy to get her back down to sleep either through feeding or rocking (mostly the latter), but nothing we do seems to be enough to get her to sleep at least for a 4 hour stretch. This applies to naps too, which are 30 minutes long on average.Things we've tried:Establish a routine: we've got that down pat. Dim the lights, bath, book, feed and then sleep. She's usually sleeping by 7:30 or 8.Use whitenoise: been doing that since she was a newbornSent her to her own room: sooner than we wanted but we moved her crib to her own room to see if it did anything. So far it's been basically the same in terms of sleep.Here's the thing. The one thing I do want to try is sleep training but whenever we go down that road all we find are people suggesting Ferber or a similar variant. My wife is vehemently opposed to CIO, extinction, Ferber, etc.I'm at my wit's end. I'd love literally any advice on what to do.I'll also add that my daughter is breastfed exclusively so there's also that. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/343wEr5

Looking for advice on Pity Parties.


As the title states, I am looking for advice from other parents who have dealt with what I find myself currently dealing with. My child, 8yo, tends carry around a victims mentality. “There’s nothing for me to do around here.” “I never have anything to play with.” “I can’t do this. It’s too hard.” “My stomach/toe/arm/foot hurts.” “You never take my side on anything.”And many more things along that same line of thinking. Obviously these things are not actually true and only occur when they are not getting their way such as when they can’t play on the phone or have to go to bed when they do not want to. I have read some articles and see that it is a common issue and just wanted some first hand accounts from others who may have dealt with this. It has gotten progressively worse recently (last few months) and I really think I need a better way of dealing with it because I find myself entertaining it more than I probably should. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2WXly5n

Weekly - Ask parents everything - March 31, 2020


This bi-weekly thread is meant as a place for non-parents and parents to ask questions to the community.Note - Remember that all questions and responses must adhere to our community rules.For daily questions see /r/Askparents via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2UOZ303

Will I fail as a parent if my kid never learns to ride a bike?


For background, my oldest was diagnosed as an infant with low muscle tone (hypotonia) and did weekly physical therapy until aging out of Early Intervention at age 3. She was slow to hit milestones and had some accompanying health issues (aspiration of thin liquids, ect) that came with the diagnosis, but otherwise the average onlooker would have had no idea. By the time she aged out of therapy she was pretty much on par with her peers physically and has stayed that way until now, age 6.She can run, jump, climb, and do everything other kids can. Honestly, my husband and I pretty much forget she ever had issues, because while it might take her a little more effort to do things it's not really that noticeable and kids have varying skill abilities anyway.Except for bike riding. This child never really took to her balance bike, and she didn't even "get" pedaling until close to age 5 (and she still sucks at it now). Being home bound, I decided to buy her a well-fitting new bike (with training wheels) in the hopes that we could work with her on it. It's been TERRIBLE. On our super flat neighborhood street she's incapable of pedaling if there's even a 3 degree incline. If there's even the tiniest downhill slope she slams on her brakes repeatedly even if she's traveling at 1/4 of my walking pace. She's deathly afraid of any cracks on the road. At first I thought it was mental, but after multiple bike rides with gentle reassurance and encouragement, I realize that her physical inability is causing a lot of the mental issues with this activity. She literally CAN'T propel herself forward on her bike with leg strength. Her 3 year old sister who got her old bike and was brand new to pedaling was literally cycling circles around her by day 2. My husband and I know there are bike riding programs out there for kids, but do those focus more on the mental? We're considering enrolling her in some sort of Occupational or Physical Therapy for this issue, but it seems extreme considering that she's 100% fine in every other aspect of her life. But at the same time I'd hate for her to miss out on a integral part of childhood (what I consider integral anyway).What's the Reddit verdict here? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2w1JlpQ

My 4 year old step son refuses to pick up after himself.


I (F20) has askes mulitiple times for my step son (M4) to simply pick up his room. I've tried bribing him by telling him if he picked up his room I'll get him a new toy and things like that. He told me 6 times yesterday to just throw everything away in his room. I've talked ro my significant other about it and he agreed with me that we should just take everything away and give it to children that are in nees. I feel like my step son is a very ungrateful child when it comes to toys and his dvds. He has a tv in his room that is constantly playing even when hes not even in there. I'm tired of always walking on his garbage and stuff like that because he doesnt want to clean up it himself and when I use to help him he would just sit there and watch and not help at all. Would I be considered a bad person if I took everything away when he doesnt even want to clean or pick it up himself. I'm just so tired and stressed out of repeating myself to him. It caused me a major headache yesterday. I almost started taking it out on the baby my (3month almost 4 month old) who didnt do anything. I woke his dad up and told him look I'm seriously about to loose it I need you to deal with it. But could you take all of his stuff away when he repeatedly tells you to throw it away is my question. I'm tired of him saying this and nothing is ever done. We usually take his stuff away for about a week so he knows he'll get it back and do it all over again. Im just tired of dealing with it. Do you guys have any suggestion on how I should handle this? My parents would have tooken everything away and gave it to a child that wants it and would appreciate it. I also would of gotten a butt whoopin for even daying something like that to my parents or my grandparents. I feel like the only way he will learn is if we send his toys and tv and dvd player to someone who will appreciate it. Plus on top of it he breaks his toys on purpose. I just really need help on how to handle such a situation. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2yqqTIx

Are twins for a second pregnancy difficult?


Hey y’all, My wife and I are going through our second pregnancy and we we’re super surprised to find out we’re having twins! They’re fraternal is all we know. We currently have a daughter who is 20 months old at the moment. She is super sweet and we hope she adjusts to the change well. I know 3 kids come with their own set of challenges but anybody who had gone through this do y’all have any tips? Or advice to help get us through. Any advice is welcome! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/39yLTcE

My 13 year old son says he is trans. Now what??


The title says it. I woke up this morning to a note outside his bedroom door letting us know he is trans and wants to begin hormone therapy. This caught all of us by surprise, mom sister, and me. We love this child more than anything and dont want to screw this up on our side. Any help is appreciated. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2w17yws

Slowly finding a new normal


I have three gorgeous girl beans. A two and a half year old, and twin 4 month olds. They are so precious to me but boy has life changed.I finally got out of a toxic, abusive relationship. I was yelled at, put down, bitten, punched and threatened (including with her own life). Even though we werent poor, I cheated the system out of almost $40k to help pay for her lavish lifestyle. I was so blinded by the hate that I couldn't see the love.By the time our first daughter was 1, we had moved 5 times to try and find a nice area for her to stay. Once we finally found a place, it still wasnt enough. 4 bedrooms, two living rooms, three bathrooms and a lawn.After she sexually assaulted me, we conceived our twins. It hit the fan pretty hard. The abuse worsened. We had to have a spa pool. We had to have the most expensive buggy, car seats, clothes and beyond for these kids.She threatened my beautiful twins lives twice before they were born and the twins could tell we werent doing well. So could our eldest. She started getting smacked and scared of mum.It all happened on miss 2s last day of daycare. I wanted her out after a series of abuse from other kids not only went unpunished, but encouraged to try and get her to speak up for herself. The irony is strong, and I realise now what was going on.I was diagnosed with psychotic depression half way in to the twin pregnancy. No wonder, said my lawyer, who ensured I would have every protection given to me by law. Everybody started asking why I didn't get help earlier. I was gobsmacked. You mean it's okay to talk to helplines? I thought those were for people who were slicing themselves. Hell she was doing that, and she didn't even want help. I was reminded just how controlling I was. When I said if she left, I would get the kids. She would say that the kids are all she had left.Now, now that I have the chance to parent and make decisions again you can bet I'm scared. But I am the luckiest guy in the world. My twins adore me and while I get it right about 20% of the time, they love me so much. Their babbles and their coos, the way they have strongly started developing because they know dad is safe is priceless.My two year old is the most incredible two year old you could ever hope for. Please and thank you, every time. Tidies toys, everytime. She is happy to say what she wants without a tantrum, because what she wants is daddy (or nanny or poppy) to play with. We would struggle, her mother and I, every day with her behaviour. Her mum gave me the bash because she didn't know how to cope with having her home from daycare. When I picked up my little girl and said "baby, you're coming home with daddy." She said "mummy stay here?" and I said "yes beautiful, is that okay?" "Yes daddy yay!"She danced in her car seat the whole way home. She is two and she knows she doesnt want mummy. She runs away whenever there is even just a phone call, because she doesn't want to be yelled at. She is happy that dad is happy and after two weeks in our new place she is starting to settle. We are starting to have so many joyous moments now that we are all safe and away from any yelling or hitting. The twins are developing beautifully (bar some scratch marks because I'm doing this with very little support and had no idea how to cut their nails or repair their skin) and I finally feel at peace.Being a dad is awesome, and while I face so much uncertainty I am ready for whatever comes my way. I love these girls and now I can feel it. Their mother? Well, after her family ignored my pleas for help they now wish they had of listened because they were looking forward to raising my kids. They broke down in tears reading the court reports and coming to me to try and arrange access. They're stuck with someone who told me I'd taken her only reason to live. Thank goodness. If that's where she is, then we likely won't see her again soon as she fails to do anything about her significant issues. Neither will her family, as they sit there to enable her to do nothing with her life.She had a man who loved her so much he would do anything. Well almost, because thankfully the line was drawn at giving me a bash.Tl;DR I'm a new solo father and am excited as I am scared, but am loving seeing my children react now that they are away from violence and abuse. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/39vtAoV

Trying to teach our 3 year old the concept of sharing


Previously she would see us holding or using an object and demand that we give it to her, threatening a tantrum if we didn't comply.Now she demands said object, and says "Daddy, share!" before the inevitable tantrum.Long way to go... via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3dM2SMe

Raising a child with low IQ


Hi, I have a 13 year old daughter with an law of 75. I am naturally worried about her future.I was wondering if there were any parents out there who have adult children with a similar IQ. I’d love to know what the future looks like for my daughter and would be interested to know what employment your child is in as well of any strategies or resources you found helpful. Anything positive would be great.Thank you :) via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3bHafTk

Help me love my newborn


Im a new dad with a son who will be 1mo old in just a few days. My wife stays at home and i am luckily still working despite this wonderful situation were all in. I love my son most of the time, but every night from about 11-2 he is the most obnoxious screaming inconsolable demon alive. I dread it. He wants to eat non stop, but is also too busy screaming to eat. Tonight my wife caught me telling my son hes a piece of shit and i just wish he would shut the fuck up, among other things. Im sick of people always saying ill miss him being so little, absolutely not. Ive always loved children, but ive never been more angry at a child than i am at my own son every night. Im not a very emotional person, and im in constant physical pain from a skydiving accident 6 years ago. I know paternal depression is a thing. But with everything going on right now, im not much of a priority. And to top ot all off, i cant even sneak out for a drink with a friend or for some time away. I just dont know how to handle my anger and borderline hatred towards this baby. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2UyiafX

Monday 30 March 2020

They wont go to sleep without us


As above so below. I have a 4.5 year old and a 3 year old who both successfully sleep in their own bed, but they will not go too sleep without is sitting on the edge of the bed. We have tried a few times putting them in bed and then leaving the room, and my oldest seems fine mostly. However, the youngin immediately gets up. Aside from being mean and yelling, what are some options for getting them too actually fall asleep by themselves? Thanks kind redditors via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3dDip0C

What is your most embarrassing moment as a parent? Here's mine....


I moved my family to a new city after accepting a wonderful job with a great company. Once I was settled, I decided to have a casual cocktail party for my new boss and the folks in my department.I like to think I'm pretty real, so I'm not about hiding my kids or shuffling them off for the day - no, they were there at the house, enjoying the company.The party was going well and so it continued through bath-time and bed-time, but there was a lot going on and our attention was a bit divided. My 4-year-old was just getting use to dressing himself for bed at the time, when he had a moment that he felt he needed to share. So in all his naked glory, he walked into the middle of the living room and announced, "Look, Daddy - I'm all the way big".I love him, so I've chosen not to ever remind him of this moment. But he's 17 now, so it's there if I need it. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3avqORZ

My husband was making a sexy joke while we were talking about the Disney Aladdin movie.


So my son is in his room for bedtime and we always keep his door cracked open. We assumed he had fallen asleep and me and my husband are in the living room talking about the Aladdin movie and he makes a joke to me "I'm gonna ride your magic rug all night" Our 5 year old from his room "Ride me too dad" Kids are hilarious. We couldnt stop laughing. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Uy8fad

Overcoming the Common Challenges Encountered by Caregivers


Overcoming the Common Challenges Encountered by Caregivers1.Caregivers should reach out to others2.Caregivers should always stay healthy3.Caregivers should keep in touch with peopleSource: Overcoming the Common Challenges Encountered by Caregivers via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/341Ntmf

Single mother need advice - no judgement please


Hi everyone,So I need advice. I am raising a baby as a single mother. Long story short, we had an affair but used protection and the protection failed (birth control and condom). I told him I wanted to keep the baby and told him I didn’t need help raising the baby but in reality I can’t afford to do it on my own. The baby’s father doesn’t want to be involved in the baby’s life due to the matter of how the baby was conceived but has offered to contribute monthly. So my question is for mother’s in this situation, what do you tell your child about their father? Do you mention their father? wait for them to ask you? The baby’s father also has children. So should he know about his siblings?Please help! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2JpBLbF

My kid enjoys saline in her nose


Yea so, she’s 15 months and for whatever reason LOVES when I squirt saline in her nose.The only reason we started doing it is because she’d been sick and we were doing the whole nose Frida thing. But for whatever reason, after a bath, she grabs the saline bottle off the changing table and gets so goddamn excited for me to squirt it in her nose. It is quite possibly the oddest most adorably pure weirdo thing ever.Are anyone else’s kids real into saline up the nose?!! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2UNiMNv

4 yr old too scared of bees to go play outside


So until about a week ago my son had no problems going outside to play in our backyard, but one day he was playing and a bumblebee flew a little too close to his face. This terrified him and made him completely lose interest in going outside for any amount of time. A few days later I forced him to be outside with me while I sat him down on my lap and tried to show him how none of the animals/bugs/bees are interested in bothering us. But logic doesnt really work on a 4yr old who recently saw a giant bee buzz right in their face. It's been a few days and I've tried bribes, taking away tv, silly names for the bee (advice my wife got from somewhere), more logic and understanding and still he rejects any attempt to go play outside.Should I wait it out, should I kill the bees? Dont really wanna rely on killing the bees cus it doesnt solve his irrational feelings towards bees. I sympathize because I was afraid of them too when I was little but I dont remember ever being so afraid as to not wanting to go outside and play. I guess I'm just asking for suggestions on how to help my son go back to playing outside. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2JsXZcI

Need advice from parents who raised their first baby without any outside help


My husband and I are expecting our first child in May. Originally, we were going to have the help from the people in our lives so we don’t burn out, but with the uncertainty of everything that’s been going on, that may no longer be an option. What are some tips to help us go at it alone? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3bDZu48

Bottle Feeding Problems


My 5 month old has had problems eating from a bottle the past few days. My wife and I are breast feeding and bottle feeding, but lately he will just chew on the bottle nipple rather than actually eat. Even breast feeding him has become a challenge as he keeps popping off. I’ve been trying to google this and best guess is teething, but how long is teething supposed to last for? He’s not eating nearly as much as he used to and it’s making me worry. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3dIOcNB

How to get a 5 year old to wipe his butt after pooping?


This has been an issue for a long time but with the kids home it is really starting to get on my last nerve. My 5 year old has been potty trained since right after his second birthday. He'll be 6 in August so we are going on 4 years of having a completely accident free child.He is physically capable of wiping his butt. I have seen him do it multiple times but this kid's brain is always somewhere else. My husband and I have joked that if he woke up tomorrow morning and was the only person on earth, it would take him weeks to realize anything was wrong. He lives in his own little world and doesn't notice things. This unfortunately means that this kid will not wipe his butt if he doesn't feel like it. He'll just pull his pants up and will play outside like there isn't poop in his butt. If I catch him then I make him go back in the bathroom until he's all clean but I don't always catch him. Sometimes he'll sneak in and out before I notice and then he'll come back home smelling poop. He doesn't care what other kids think so I can't use that. He doesn't care if he gets a rash. I make him clean his own undies but that doesn't have any affect on him. It has gotten so bad that I considered locking the bathroom and making all 3 boys sign in and out so I know when he uses the bathroom but that is insane, right? Any other options? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Jn9N0l

Worried about my daughter (F19). Since picking her up from college, she's barely left her room


By barely - she spends 23 hours a day in her room and we only see her when she emerges with headphones on to grab a handful of cookies or eat dinner. Even then, she spends 15 minutes at the table, then walks out without so much as picking up her plate from the table. She does still have classes and spends a good deal of time on them, but this seems a bit much.I've encouraged her to watch movies with us, help with dinner, etc. but she refuses. I've asked her how she's feeling and it's always "fine" barely looking up from her phone to acknowledge me.She started therapy in recent months and and told my wife and I she was mad at us for how her childhood went. TL/DR her younger brother had mental health issues, and we didn't give her enough attention for about all of high school. She also lived with her grandparents for much of that time because of her brother, and they were close to her school. So we did a shitty job supporting her when she needed us most.I can't fix the past, but want to start slowly repairing things at her pace. Looking for thoughts. Thanks! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Jqwkt4

Balancing the unfairness of hand-me-downs with budget considerations


We have three kids: a 10-year-old boy, an 8-year-old boy, and a 5-year-old.There are a lot of cases, particularly with our middle child, where it would be easier on our budget to give him his older brother's hand-me-downs, like clothes and outgrown bikes/scooters/etc.But we also want the two younger children to have at least some of their own new things, even if it means we have to stretch our budget more.How do you navigate those decisions? Is there a certain percentage of the time that you go for new rather than available hand-me-downs? Are there certain items you won't hand down and will always buy new? What if money's tight? How does that change things? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2QWajXc

Help dealing w/ aggressive 4 year old


Hello,I have a 4 year old daughter who is very aggressive and destructive when angry and I can't figure out how to make it stop. Anything can set her off. Yesterday morning, it was because I parked the car on a driveway chalk drawing she did a day before. Usually, it's when she doesn't get her way or if she's very tired.Here is my dilemma. When she gets angry she lashes out on the environment. She will try to flip furniture, pull curtains off the walls, knock over end tables, slam doors. Very recently, she ran off down the street. Obviously, I can't let her do that so I have to physically stop her. As soon as I, or my wife, touch her, she will start hitting, scratching, kicking, and biting us. She drew blood yesterday on my wife's arms. As I type I this, I have scabs on the tops of both of my hands. If I try to restrain her, she'll scream that we're choking her and try to spit on us. She'll fight to free herself until she passes out. So, you can see my problem. I can't let her destroy the house, but I also can't physically stop her without being attacked myself.We have tried everything: spanking (which only makes her angrier), timeouts (she will not stay in the timeout spot and will fight you to get out), taking things away, talking to her after when she finally gets calm. When she is in the red zone, it's like she can't even hear us talking. There is nothing that can stop her.Lately, my only method is to take her upstairs to a spare bedroom and sit against the door so she can't leave (while inside room with her). She will repetitively scream "go away" or "stupid head" over and over for at least an hour while trying to get out of the room. It only stops when she completely fatigues herself. I don't even know how she still has a voice when it is done. By the end we are scraped up, tired and wondering why we decided bring a second child into this.I need a new strategy but don't have any better ideas. I can't let her destroy things and I can't let her hit me. But if I stop one, I get the other. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2Uumf4P

Mom Premonitions are SO REAL


Last night I had the vision of something wrapped around my 3 month olds finger & cutting off circulation & him losing a finger. And this morning I just saw A HAIR WRAPPED AROUND HIS FINGER. Was able to quickly and easy pull it off. Finger has 0 swelling, not red , but the skin under the hair was definitely red and it’d been there for a little bit. What parenting premonitions have you had? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2QVA224

Last Call! r/Parenting Moderation Application


Before we close out the application period - submit your application now.Please note! We are only looking for someone that is available from about 12/midnight to 7 am US Eastern time. If you're unsure where you are in relation to that, check the UTC Time. During daylight saving time Eastern US is -4 UTC. You can convert your timezone here. So we are *most likely* looking for someone who lives outside of the US. (This isn't a requirement...just an FYI.)Other stuff:No mod experience is necessary.Must be on Reddit for at least 6 months.Must have a searchable user history (yeah, we're gonna go through posts and comments).An existing, active, participant in the r/Parenting community.Sometimes people will call you a cunt.Mod Application Here via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/39rwDys

Two-year-old with the mouth of a sailor...HOW DO I BREAK HIS SWEARING HABIT??


First-time mom here in need of all the advice, tips, tricks, and strategies. I’m at a complete loss here. My precocious toddler is an expert in mimicry. When I water our plants, he likes to pretend to do the same. When I say “cmon dude”, he’ll reply with the same. Unfortunately, after hearing my spouse playing video games and talking to coworkers, he’s picked up on some not-so-cute phrases. AND HE WILL NOT STOP. Every time we FaceTime with family, it’s “fuck you” or some variation. When we went for an oil change, anytime anyone greets him with a smile his response includes the f word. At the grocery store- a big, loud f you to all. I’ve noticed he tends to swear more when he’s embarrassed, feeling angry, and nervous around strangers. I’ve tried sternly telling him “no” and explaining why it’s wrong. I’ve tried time outs. I’ve tried offering replacement words when he says them. Any of you have any experience with a toddler Ari Gold? What worked for you? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2UKca2o

11 year old ADHD son lies, manipulates, and gaslights us regularly. He is driving us crazy. We need help.


There's a lot of backstory here, so it's probably going to be a long read.My 11 year old son's dad died in a car accident when son was around 18 months old. Before that, everything was normal. My son today has no memories of his dad, except from pictures.When son was around 2.5-3, he started having behaviour problems with respect to tantrums and defiance. I thought it was just normal terrible two toddler acting out, so I tried all the discipline methods everyone uses. Time outs. Taking toys away. Reward systems. Nothing worked. I thought it was just a phase that would pass, since some kids take longer to learn discipline than others, so I kept being consistent with the discipline, hoping for improvement.When son is around 3.5-4, the situation becomes critical. His behaviour is showing no signs of improvement. He refuses to listen to any authority. His tantrums become very aggressive and violent. He is poorly adjusted and cannot handle social situations, like sharing. He breaks toys regularly. He was expelled from one preschool after only a month of attendance. We are trying every disciplinary measure we can think of, but nothing works. Preschool suggests getting him tested and engaging therapists. He gets tested and is diagnosed with ODD at the age of 4. Therapy commences.The therapy doesn't help at all. I don't get any good answers, but instead am given unspecific homework that doesn't really help. I pay $120 every week to go to a venting session. Meanwhile, son's behaviour is just getting worse -- it's like I'm falling deeper and deeper into quicksand and can't get out.When son is 5, I meet my now-husband. Son blatantly defies husband at every chance he gets and has absolutely zero respect for him. Son's behaviour continues to worsen, and he gets smarter about it. He now starts lying and manipulating us, a problem that still occurs to this day.When son is 6, he is now school-aged. Gone are the days of when half the time at school is playtime. He now has to sit at a desk, work with other children, focus on a teacher, and cooperate. Son is incapable of doing these things. He throws school supplies at other children regularly and rolls around on the floor whenever the class is doing storytime, for example. The teacher cannot manage son, so he gets moved to a low enrolment classroom for special-needs children. Still, they cannot manage him, so he regularly gets set aside so he can calm down. Son learns to use this to his advantage. The school is clueless, since it isn't a very good district.Son's behaviour at home, meanwhile, just gets worse. He refuses to listen to us. He is still aggressive. He doesn't care about any consequence he might get. If he has to put away his toys, for example, cue a screaming fit that lasts for up to five hours. Son regularly breaks toys during his tantrums. Son refuses to eat healthy meals and regularly sneaks off into the pantry to eat junk food he isn't allowed to eat, like potato chips. We put a lock on the pantry, and cue screaming and hitting for a month until he accepts the reality. This remains the status quo for the next two years.Son is now 8. His behaviour is not improving. He is now big enough to cause serious damage. He refuses to do chores and cracks our countertop by throwing a sugar bowl at it. He now makes holes in the walls regularly. He refuses to do his homework. He can't keep any friends, and gets into many fights with other children on the playground. He steals from other children regularly. The other kids aren't very kind about it, and this just makes son angry and worsens his behaviour. He gets suspended from school regularly, and spends almost entire days in the principal's office.We end up moving, so we get a different school district and a better therapist. Son (who is 10 at this point) gets retested and is diagnosed with ADHD. We learn tools from this therapist to help improve son's behaviour, and it's excellent. This is the first therapist we have that does more than sit and listen without giving any advice. Son doesn't react well to this therapist and rebels against the new therapy tools at first. However, he soon relents and does them. His behaviour, for once, seems to finally be improving!That is, until we get a call from the day camp we sent him to that summer. We find out that he told a few other boys that they don't have to listen to the camp counselors and that they can do whatever they want. We talk with him about his behaviour, and we think he learned his lesson and will listen to the counselors. But then, he gets kicked out a few days later for hitting a counselor; his behaviour has become too unmanageable. Now that he's been kicked out of day camp, we decide that we will make him do chores all summer instead of day camp, hoping that will teach him a lesson.Unfortunately, it didn't teach him any lesson, and by August, we're right back where we used to be. Son starts lying again and sneaking around to do things behind our backs. He sneaks out of bed after hours to play on his Nintendo. We have to start keeping the Nintendo in our bedroom so he doesn't sneak onto it at night. Although violence isn't so much of an issue anymore, we have to continuously monitor him because he starts snooping around in the house to take things that aren't his to take. He refuses to do his homework when school starts and won't eat healthy, balanced meals.The next year (son is 11), we seem to start making gains with his behaviour again. We start breaking tasks down into small chunks (since that's what the therapists say helps for ADHD), and he seems to be cooperating now. Although it's still an impossibility for him to work without parental supervision or interact with other kids in a positive, safe manner, we are making gains again. He starts doing his homework, and will do a limited number of chores. But then, around January, we find out that he's started stealing money. The cash in husband's wallet went missing, and we find it in son's room. We ask him where he got the money from, and he lies about it. We see right through the lie and ask him to tell the truth. He refuses to talk and lies about it for days. Since then, his behaviour has just gotten worse. We're back to violence. We're back to screaming. We're back to lying. And now, with current events, he's been at home, and, as I'm expected to work from home, I can't manage him and get my work done at the same time.I can't believe we're back here again. I swear every time we think he is improving, we find out he's just being smarter about hiding his behaviour and is getting better at manipulating and gaslighting us. I don't know what to do now. I have nothing more to give to him. It feels like we have tried everything we can. I'm ashamed to admit it, but I'm having a harder time loving him as a son because he's a manipulative liar who is constantly gaslighting us. All I want for him is to be able to gain the skills that he is going to need to be a happy adult who has a job he loves and is able to have meaningful relationships. I'm open for suggestions about how to curb his lying, how to help decrease his violence, and how to help him work independently. These are things we've been working on for years, and I've tried everything I can think of to help him. I seriously have no idea what to do now. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2UG22Yk

Activities for a 1.9y/o that require little energy from me


I work from home and have a 1 year 9 month old, and I need ideas for activities she can do that require little energy from me. I'm so tired always... like lethargic. As young as she is she rarely plays by herself for long and require my wife and I to always be doing something with her. By the end of the day I'm so tired I'm just following her around as she fiddles with stuff. By the end of the day I have no energy to do any work and tend to just watch a bit of tv and go to sleep. It's been like this for a while and I need a break!​So please help! Activities she can do independently or with little energy from me!! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/39utw8S

New parents in hard times


Hi all,My wife and I are expecting our first in early May. Given all that’s uncertain in the world today, we’re nervous (but still so excited) about bringing a new life into the world. We’ve had prenatal care cancelled, showers delayed, hospital tours & parenting classes cancelled, and it’s unlikely that our families will be able to meet our son until he’s at least a month old.We’re very fortunate in other respects and have no right to complain, but we’re seeing most of our “birth plan” fall to pieces & we feel very unprepared because of it. I’m doing alright with it, but I can tell it’s taking a toll on my spouse.Any wise words for excited, but unprepared, almost-new parents in this time would be appreciated. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3dF8B6j

Weekly - Stories from the week/end - March 30, 2020


This weekly thread is meant as a place to share stories that happened to us as parents over the weekend. Share good, bad, fun, not fun, etc. Also, if you ever wonder who we are, click here to meet the mod team! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2JpE2nh

My husband slapped my daughter’s face


My husband (who coincidentally is turning 46 tomorrow) slapped my 6 y/o daughter in the face today. On both sides. He didn’t tell me he did it and I only found out when I was brushing her teeth and noticed red finger marks by the side of her ears. She has long hair, so normally those areas would be covered by her hair. I asked her what happened and she said “daddy slapped me”.I confronted him asking, in front of our 8 y/o son (they were playing lego in his room), if he had slapped her, and he said yes because she had kicked him in the face. (Earlier in the day she was throwing a massive tantrum that I couldn’t talk her down from and my husband had offered to help. I had left her room at that point and so he went in while I was already in my son’s room. I guess in the middle of him talking to her she started flailing in anger and struck him.)Nevertheless, NOTHING makes a 46 y/o, 180lb man slap a 6 y/o 40lbs child OK!I told him so in front of my son.And also told my daughter that what daddy did was wrong.She’s such a sweet child that before going to bed, she still went to him and said “I hope you have a good birthday tomorrow”.My husband then (kind of) apologized to her, but not before making a point to say that she had kicked him, making it sound like she might have deserved this.I’m heartbroken and furious. He has a history of bad temper and blowing up with the children. He’s done a lot of soul searching and had been able to improve a lot over the years, but the bursts of anger are still there and it seems it’s only getting worse with this lockdown.He’s otherwise a good father, we co-provide for the family, he plays with the children and is involved in their school life.How do I help my children understand that this behavior is wrong even coming from a person that they clearly love and also loves them? My biggest fear is for them to grow thinking that hitting is part of the norm when you’re angry and accept that from an abusive partner in the future. Is calling my husband out in front of the kids out-of-line and undermining his authority? What can I do to protect them?My husband obviously needs therapy (which he repeatedly refuses to go). I just don’t know what to say to get through to him.Please help. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2wMeGgG

HELP with two toddlers, one always wants to sleep in our bed, but we only have one bedroom for both of them!


So I have a real issue. My boyfriend and I together have two toddlers in the house. His son, has co-dependency issues because he always wants to be by his side. We need to figure out a way to get him to sleep in his own bed. But whenever my bf gets him to sleep, he falls asleep in his arms and he goes and sets him in his bed. 99% of the time, the child wakes up and ends up waking our other child up! PLEASE HELP. I’m desperate at this point. Can’t lock them in their room together because the independent toddler learned some hitting traits from some very naughty children (Another problem I face that I I’m trying to cure.) 😭🥺 thank you so much in advance, everyone! via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2QUhqiI

Baby staying with grandparents


I am a stay at home first time mom to a 4 month old breastfed baby girl. My in laws keep pestering us to watch her and want her to stay the night. They have 6 other grandkids kids (3 from each daughter) who started going over there at a few weeks old and stayed the night at a month or so old. None of them were breast fed. I don’t feel ready yet to be without her, especially overnight! I feel like as long as I’m breastfeeding she should be home.When did you start letting your baby be watched by others? How would you put a stop to the pestering in a nice way? via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/2xw0Jnd

My son, only child, doesn't want the inheritance due to resentment for me


Dear all, I am using a throwaway account for this, and will try to keep it short.I have a 23-year-old son, and he is my only child. Lately, whenever inheritance is mentioned, he raises hell and yells that he doesn't need anything. Furthermore, he is saying that, since he doesn't plan on ever being in a relationship or getting married, he needs nothing and will burn down everything that he is given.The reason for that are my three failed marriages. He blames me for not having had a normal family, and having spent his life with his grandparents. I have managed to save a considerable amount of money, and have a small property to my name, all of which I have no one to pass on to but him. He has threatened to burn all his childhood possessions if I ever mention inheritance again.I am at a loss here, please help me, I have a feeling he is possessed. via /r/Parenting https://ift.tt/3dCWAyd