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Being a parent is one of the most ridiculously challenging things there is in our existence, and although it is a personal choice, if committed to, it can lead to both physical and mental exhaustion. 

Needless to say, every parent wishes only the best for their offspring – however, the little ones enter this world without a manual, meaning that you're just going to have to wing it. 

It so happens that most folks, whether they're still expecting or have already welcomed their precious babies, often put an immense amount of pressure on themselves. It's understandable that we all want to do things right, yet sometimes, a simple piece of advice can change your entire perception of parenthood. 

What is the single hardest lesson for a parent to learn about raising kids?” – this online user turned to one of Reddit’s communities dedicated to asking women questions, hoping to find out what hard lessons parents learn when raising children. The post has managed to receive nearly 2K upvotes and 536 worth of comments discussing the difficulties of parenthood.

More info: Reddit

#1

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online You have to parent the kid you have, not the one you want.

troismanzanas , joey zanotti Report

#2

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Picking your battles. Does it really matter if your kid wears mismatched socks? Is it really a big deal if they wear a princess dress to go grocery shopping? Those are minor things that absolutely do not make a difference in the long run. Let it go and life is easier for you both.

WasabiChickpea , Olga/ Олька Report

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BadCat
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Often when parents have issues of such minor things it's really about their insecurities of what society thinks. My mom would tell me I looked homeless wearing 2 different pairs of socks and made this huge reaction about it. As if anyone would have noticed under long pants and runners.

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#3

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Your kid isn’t giving you a hard time. THEY are having a hard time.

stone_fox_in_mud added:

Absolutely. And so much so for any child with a disability.

[deleted] added:

I wish more people would understand this, when their children are having a tantrum. So maby people write it off as bad behaviour. Where in reality it is your child having an overwhelming amount of emotions and feelings and no clue as to how to deal with them.

A parent would do their child's emotional development a huge favour by trying to understand this.

The book "The Science of Parenting" explains this from a neurological and attachment psychological point of view - with many great sources.

bebegun54321 , Virginia State Parks Report

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Jax
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We foster 6 kids, 3 of whom are toddlers. When the littlest was just over 2, we had had a long day running errands and it was quickly approaching nap time. He was fussy and cranky and completely inconsolable. He was 2, tired, hangry, and didn't have the words that adults do to explain how he was feeling. Several times we passed an older lady with her 2 daughters and 3 grandkids. Finally it got to be too much so I just sat down on the floor and held him while I rocked and rubbed his back. The older lady was going past the end of the aisle on her scooter and stopped and backed up just to tell me that I was doing a great job. She said it was refreshing to see a young mom not screaming at, ignoring, punishing or threatening punishment, or even trying to bribe the child ito behaving well when a tiny one was melting down. It's sad that this was something that even needed to be said. As adults we need to take a step back and realize that our children are all pieces of our collective future...

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#4

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online If you still have baggage or trauma that’s not dealt with, you and your kids will suffer for it.

stone_fox_in_mud , David Woo Report

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BadCat
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Everyone is going through something. Before you react to kids, stop, take a step back and think about where your reaction is coming from.

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#5

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online You’re there to guide, not control. Even when they are doing it wrong.

queenoreo , Diderot's toe Report

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Trisha Howson
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yep let them learn that how they know how to do things growing up you don't let them learn you do it for them. They are gonna grow up not knowing what to do

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#6

That they are individuals and deserve respect. Also, you have to earn their respect. It shouldn’t be freely given just because you gave birth to them or provide them with basic necessities like housing, clothing, or food.

downbutmaybeup31 Report

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Danniee Gyrl
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

THIS!!!! I really dislike hearing a parent HOLD THAT CR@P over their child (clothing, feeding, shelter etc) it is really a disgusting thing. As a PARENT, this is what you are supposed to do!! -- It is really sad that our (US) Gov't has to MAKE some parents go to Parenting Classes or tell them kids can not live in filth. Or that they have to feed AND bath them.

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#7

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online They are not you - now say it again 10 times. They may or may not like the things you do or did at their age. No amount of yelling, begging, forcing, or conjoling will make them just like you. They absolutely will not have the same life experience and they have a completely different perspective than you. Even if they're your "mini me" they are absolutely their own person. You can even go as far to say that if they're truly a carbon copy of either parent, you've probably done something wrong as a parent.

FlourFlavored , Franklin Park Library Report

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BadCat
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It's taken my mom decades to figure out that I'm not her shadow puppet.

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#8

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Don't punish them for having feelings and then expecting them to manage those feelings *perfectly* when you can't even curb your anger disappointment at your kid having a hard time. Sorry they can't get their tantrum together in 5 seconds. Maybe figure out why they are emotional and help them fix it.

TenaciousToffee , Rishabh Mathur Report

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Jax
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When my son was 13-ish he had friends over and he and I got into a somewhat heated debate about who knows what and he was angry when he walked away and slammed his bedroom door closed. No problem, he's angry, totally get that. After a couple minutes his friends walked out of his room and started to leave. I had thought they were staying for dinner so I asked them why they were going. One kid said they figured T was in trouble for raising his voice and slamming his door shut. They were flabbergasted when I told them they didn't have to leave. All my son was doing was expressing himself the best way he was able to at the time. People get angry, voices get raised, it happens, so what. It's how you deal with it that matters. He always knew he could use colorful language such as "this is stupid and unfair." However, he also knew if he turned that into "YOU'RE stupid and unfair" that would've been a completely different situation. We need to allow them the freedom to express themselves.

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1.21Gigawatts?!
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

My mom has had a “No crying unless physically hurt!” Rule since I was in KINDERGARTEN. So FIVE YEARS OLD. I got terrible anger issues so “No anger!” Was implemented too. She has even called me a crybaby which made it hard for me to cry in 8th grade because she made me afraid that people would hate me for being emotional BUT I’M AN INSANE EMPATH WHO CAN FEEL WHAT OTHERS FEEL AND I CAN’T HELP IT MOM

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Ambry Petersen
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

However helping them to learn to control thier emotions is imperative. You cannot survive as an adult in a social environment without learning a little self control. However when dealing with a tantruming child remember that its a skill that takes years of practice and experiance to learn. No one learns self control over night. (Some adults never do sadly.)

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Lady Goldberry
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Right. I think we as a society have expectations of our children that we don't have ourselves as adults.

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European sparrow
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When I read those great responses and the thoughtfullness behind it, I even more realise what a crappy job my mum did. I have an bad relationship with her and more snd more I discover why. And her bad example harmed my relationship with my oldest. I didn't know how to parent when he was little.

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Alana Voeks
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

One thing you can do is explain that it's normal for our feelings to sometimes be mysteries to ourselves, but that doesn't mean we can scream about it, especially indoors. Give them ways to better cope with their feelings (grounding exercises typically help).

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MYRIAH FIELDS
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I always get punished and bad mouthed when i have feelings of dislike towards a certain person. Like I am 17 and stay in my room a lot because it's quiet and there are things to do besides listen to two babies scream and cry. Recently, I have been forced to stay out of my room and when I answered the question as to why I dont want to be downstairs as often, I got into trouble

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Wysteria_Rose
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I would make our kids sit out their angry moments until they cooled off. Then we'd have a talk about how yes, we all get angry; I get angry and so does their dad but part of growing up is learning to control yourself and not let your emotions control you. So I understand you're mad but no, you cannot yell or hit because of it.

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Ann M Clinkscales
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Gosh, even as a teenager I didn't understand this. I wish my parents could have helped me back then. But then. They didn't exactly have their c**p together either! I did therapy to figure it all out while in college! It's still a process, even 40 years later!

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TMM Boxer
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Even as an adult it takes days or even weeks to deal with stuff so why would it be a shorter time frame for the young, not fully developed mind

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Colin Russell-Conway
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

How do we expect our kids to be emotionally well rounded without teaching them some introspection. After comforting them (or attempting to) ask them how they're feeling, if they can identify it, follow that up by why do you think you feel that way and ask them to talk about it. Guide them in their own discovery of their feelings and processing them and they'll thank you in the long run. Parenting isn't a sprint, it's lots of tiny wins, some of which you won't see the benefit from for years but it's literally the definition of pride knowing you helped them in their own journey.

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WhyAmIHere
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

My mom took 4 whole years to figure out that after our cats died (that I was raised with) I needed therapy. I was always super quiet, much more irritable, and just less of a person. I was like that for 4 years before she asked if I was ok. She said, and I quote "Honey what's wrong? I saw you acting weird today." my mother. She was always so busy that she never cared to see if I was ok. Edit: she though I was a drama queen when I would shut down over things, or just be super irritable. Never once thought that I needed help of any kind. And mind you, this was a whole 180 from my previous personality. I was super friendly, hardly got mad, always wanted to be out there and whatever. They both died when I was 6, one early in the year and one later. I'm not gonna say my specific age but I am under 16. I've only been in therapy for a couple years and she cried when she finally noticed me getting "better" as she called it.

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Rita Rose
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Even as a teen I would get shouted at for crying and told to grow up

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Lonecoolman
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I WAS BORN LAST OF 5 BOYS. BEHIND ME CAME OUR SISTER. BUT AFTER MY SISTER WAS BORN, MY BROTHER (2 YEARS OLDER ) AND ME WERE NEGLECTED BY MY MOM. BUT IT JUST BRINGS UP BAD MEMORIES. DAN AND I WERE LOST. WE COMMITTED FELONIES AND RAN WILD. I REMEMEBER MY MOM CASTIGATING ME AFTER SHE FOUND RUBBERS IN MY ROOM. YES SHE WOULD SEARCH MY ROOM WHEN I WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL AND NOT HOME. THE DAY I CAME HOME AND SHE WAS WAITING TO POUNCE ON ME. MY STEP DAD WAS A COWARD AND JUST SAT THERE. SHE TROWS THE BOX OF RUBBERS ON THE TABLE AND SCREAMS, WHOM HAVE YOU BEEN USING THESE DIRTY THINGS WITH. I TOLD HER YOU DO NOT WANT TO KNOW. SHE REPEATS THE QUESTION 3 MORE TIMES, I TURN TO MY STEP DAD AND TELL HIM TO TELL HER SHE DOES NOT WANT TO KNOW. SHE SCREAMS AGAIN. SO I TOLD HER. SHE HAD A MAJOR BRAIN FREEZE.....SCREAMS AT ME TO GO TO MY ROOM. MY STEP DAD COMES IN TO TELL ME ABOUT THE BIRDS AND THE BEES. I TOLD HIM I KNEW AND THAT IS WHY I HAD RUBBERS. MY MOM WANTED ME TO GET MY G/F PREGNANT

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#9

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online You are not their friend (you are their parent), you will mess up but love and kisses are very important at every age

No-Seaworthiness4874 , HS You Report

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Danniee Gyrl
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I informed my son, we are not friends...yet we can be friendly with one another. He is now almost 22, and we ARE friends now. I have done my parenting of him (still being a parent but not that 0-18 parent) He is AWESOME

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#10

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online They (the kids) need to make mistakes.

Treatie915 , Mario A. P. Report

#11

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online That you aren't raising kids. They are already are kids. You are raising adults, hopefully competent adults. Competent adults who know how to be an adult.

rosemarysage , Karen Clarke Ng Report

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Jax
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We try to tell our kiddos to be better tomorrow than they are today. Not just with behavior and attitude, but with everything...just be a better human. There will always be mistakes, and arguments, we as the adult, need to be sure to handle those things well so our children will learn how to handle them well.

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#12

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Every single thing you do teaches them something. Signed, my kid’s first word was ‘s**t’

MamaBella , Nenad Stojkovic Report

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Danniee Gyrl
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

My kid first word was "Sh*t" as well (at 1 yo). We were in the grocery store. It was a busy time as well...😆😁

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#13

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Parents need to do their part when their child is struggling in school. We can only do so much in 8 hours. If parents want results faster then they need to commit.

The_Special_Teacher , m_takahashi Report

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BadCat
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Pay attention to patterns and figure out why your child is struggling. It could be it's not because they're being lazy.

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#14

That the best thing to do is to prepare the child for the path and not the path for the child.

Dianachick Report

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Arlo (they/he)
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1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is actually very smart why does it have no comments (edit: now it has comments, just not when I posted :D)

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#15

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Kids tell lies. They do. It’s part of their emotional and intellectual development. Don’t make it a big deal. Respond appropriately to the untruthful ness. Discuss it. Don’t take it personally.

teachingzeus , Marco Zanferrari Report

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BadCat
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is a fine line. Kids will lie usually for a reason. Other times it's not so much a lie but a made up story they're telling. It's important to teach kids to tell the truth while respecting other people's privacy.

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#16

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Hardest pill for me to swallow so far is that they are going to grow up. My kids are 8 and 12 now and I am already SO sad about them growing up and moving out etc. I do focus on the time we've got now, but when those thoughts pop into my head I get SUPER sad. We haven't reached the teen years yet though so check back in the next few years.

WORST part of parenting: figuring out what the f**k to make for dinner EVERY. SINGLE. NIGHT. I hate it so much. But if I don't feed them, they'll die, so that's lame.

hookedonfonicks , Brian Turner Report

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BadCat
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

LOL When I didn't know what to make for dinner, I just made something simple. Eating is important but not every dinner has to be this 3-4 dish, fancy buffet.

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#17

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Teach them independence. Let them fall and scrap their knees. Let them fail. You are preparing for the real world. There will be mean people so you need to know that it’s important to be confident.

Lwilks0510 , Franklin Park Library Report

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Marianne
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'm a new mother and I am constantly worried how to decide if they will only scrap their knee or if they will die. Am I alone with this?

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#18

My mom said, “That they are not a miniature version of yourself. As individuals they will need to do some things their own way, even if it’s not YOUR way.”

My mom has always allowed my siblings and myself to be authentically ourselves. She’s amazing.

Civil-Conclusion-726 Report

#19

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Kids are tiny humans. It's easy to slip into seeing them as little machines into which you're supposed to input life lessons and get out good behavior. But even as kids, they are whole humans--they have bad days where they're grumpy and will be short with you, and there are foods they will never like no matter how many times you put it on their plate, and they'll pick the sports or hobbies they're into regardless of what you were into. If they're having a bad day, don't explain to them why they shouldn't be having a bad day; don't invalidate how they feel about things; treat them with the kindness and understanding and encouragement you give to your friends. I'm not saying "be your kid's best friend"--you need to be their parent and help them build the life skills and emotional intelligence necessary for a happy life, but do it in a way that treats them like the whole, individual humans they are.

Ginger_ish , Honza Soukup Report

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Alana Voeks
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1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Remember, they're closer to animalhood than you are. They do things to get the best results. Would you start screaming at your puppy for peeing in the house if they aren't fully potty trained? No, you show them where they wet, tell them.no, and put them in time out. Same with kids. Kids need to understand that actions have consequences, and sometimes what feels good in the now can be very detrimental in the later.

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#20

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online At some point, around age 12 or 13, it will seem like they genuinely hate you and they will be incredibly unpleasant to deal with. It passes, but it is rough when you are in the middle of it. You have to weather it with patience and grace (and consequences when warranted) because it is only a stage.

FionaTheFierce , Bryan Viers Report

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BadCat
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Parents make it so much more difficult than it has to be. You're teen isn't going to be going to interviews at conservative, professional companies so let them dye their hair, cut how they want, dress how they want. Let them express themselves, figure out who they and who they want to be. It's all part of the growing up process.

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#21

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online You’re gonna feel like you’re failing constantly...you’re not, not in the slightest, but you’ll feel like it

heaven2731 , Garrette Report

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cadena kuhn
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

For yrs my family had me convinced I was a bad mother. Then a few months ago my niece told me that all the cousins were jealous of my daughter as she was the only one who's parents truly loved and respected her and always put her 1st. That was the 1st time I truly thought I might b doing this right

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#22

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online I am not less of a mother on bad days.

-DontPanic42- , MIKI Yoshihito Report

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Queenie-Poo
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

And it's okay to have bad days. Those comments about "enjoy every moment because they're only little once" are bulls**t. It's okay to not relish the poopy diapers and tantrums. Just enjoy the good moments and remember the challenging ones are normal and temporary.

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#23

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online The world is dangerous and unfortunately we cannot follow their every step. They grow up, they leave the house and bad things do happen

curious_mondi97 , John Walker Report

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Veronica Richard
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I would add "we shouldn't follow every step". They need to learn resilience, and solving all their problems is not the way they learn it.

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#25

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online More than the single hardest lesson, but these are the top for me:

* You're going to constantly second guess decisions, and feel guilty for things on a regular basis.
* Support, encouragement and trust are as important as love
* Letting them fail is epically hard; showing them how to come back from failure is vital
* If you split with your partner, remember that your kid(s) still need and want them in their life (barring abuse, etc.)
* You're raising them to be adults- teach them how to manage their own lives, and don't try to live their life for them
* When you like them the least is when they need love the most
* Communicate with them the way you want to be communicated with- kids are people, and they model your behaviors

phaedra_rising , Chad Kittel Report

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Mary E Perry
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Separate out inherent personhood from their specific behaviors. I think it's a good idea when your objecting to what they are doing to say, I love you but I don't love this behavior. This is what I expect differently.

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#26

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online You get to choose how to love your kids, how to teach your kids, and how you’re going to f**k up with your kids.

Choose wisely as all are inevitable.

Psyechic , chiaki hayashi Report

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Danniee Gyrl
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Each step of parenting/loving/teaching my kid, I KNOW that I made mistakes. I did apologize to him for things I said or did. After I disciplined him, I ALWAYS told him I LOVE YOU. I made sure his mental/emotional state of self was good by asking him direct questions. I spent time with him. I am honest with him on every level. I am not perfect yet I made sure not to f*ck his life up ...😅

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#27

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online They will have a difference of opinion, and disagree with you.

_celticbuttercup_ , Lee Coursey Report

#28

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Their kids might not have anything in common with them or turn out differently than expected. I see a lot of parents who are surprised when they struggle to connect with their child or something hard pops up. So many small things can be huge stressors to kids and become gigantic, time consuming concerns for parents.

anon , Larry Koester Report

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the awesome Piplup
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That is my dream room! My fave animal is the Platypus! And that is in this room

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#29

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Even your best, most thoughtful intentions can go wrong.

WishfulHibernian6891 , Bureau of Land Management Report

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Ambry Petersen
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1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That's part of mortality, just about everything you do has the power to go wrong. Try to learn from mistakes as you go.

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#30

30 Brutal Lessons For More Effective Parenting, As Shared By Moms Online Your purpose is not to pass down your own rules about life, but to put life itself in context for them.

(I'm not a parent tho, but I was surprised when someone said that that's how they parent their child and I thought it made sense)

strange_socks_ , 柳雩 Report

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