Here’s a hard one for you, dear Pandas: how many different dinosaurs do you know? No Googling! Look, we don’t wanna show off too much, but we know someone who can name over 30 of them! If that’s not worth bragging about, nothing is.
When we were kids, many of us probably had way more confidence than we do now. We didn’t overthink stuff—we simply said what was on our minds and did what we wanted to do. And ‘flexing’ in front of others, whether at school, in the playground, or at home, was very different than humble-bragging at work or university. Kids would flex about the most unusual stuff. Like having cool toys, being able to count really high, and (yes!) knowing a ton of dinosaur names.
The parents of Reddit shared their funniest “weird flex, but ok” moments they’ve ever seen from their kids in a roaringly witty viral thread. We’re sharing the best stories with you, Pandas, to give you something to smile about—and to remind you to bring back a bit of that confidence most of us had when we were little. Got any similar tales to tell? We’re all ears! Drop by the comments and out your digital quills to work.
Bored Panda wanted to learn about the right balance to have between confidence and humility, and how to help keep your kids active, curious, and engaged with the world as they grow, so we reached out to Lenore Skenazy for a few insights. Skenazy is the president of Let Grow, a nonprofit promoting childhood independence and resilience, and the founder of the Free-Range Kids movement. She was kind enough to answer our questions.
"We all want our kids to feel confident, even cocky—but we don’t want them to be smug jerks. Is there a way to make sure the good side of feeling self-assured doesn’t become, 'I’m better than you, little peon'? Yes, and it’s simple: Give your kids some time for free, unsupervised, unstructured play," she said. Read on for our full interview with her!
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Not a kid but when I was 5, I had a mad crush on the 20 yo. daughter of this wealthy family friend of ours. I had asked for her hand in marriage and she agreed willingly. Playful to her but fully serious on my part, she was carrying her soon to be groom when her mother confronted me.
"you need to have money if you want to marry my daughter".
I looked right into her eyes and without missing a beat reached into my little pockets and tossed her a penny. Her face priceless, my smirk flawless.
My game never peaked again.
When I worked at daycare, a three year old boy took my hand, got down on one knee, and proposed to me. His mom was cool. I started calling her mom in front of him, and he was just so proud.
*Bows down* Where were you when I was 5 and had a crush on an older girl, O'Mighty God of the Sassy Coin Toss... XP
my real question is why does a 5 year old have a better love life than me
Skenazy, the president of Let Grow and the founder of the Free-Range Kids movement explained to Bored Panda what this type of unsupervised and unstructured play looks like. It is "play where the kids have to decide what games they’re going to play, and make the teams pretty fair, and solve their own arguments. Why? Play is how, throughout history, kids have become socialized," she said.
"Mother Nature put the drive to play in kids so they’d do all the hard work it takes to get to the goal: fun. To get there, kids have to collaborate, communicate, compromise. They have to 'read' the other kids to get buy-in, and tolerate some frustration. Those are all social-emotional skills kids need to develop so they can get along with other people. And since no one wants to play with a smug, selfish prima donna, the prima donna learns, through play, to be a little less pushy and prima-donna-y. The reward is happiness, so the lesson reinforces itself."
Skenazy shared some tips and resources for parents on how they can make all of that start happening. "Set aside some time when your kids can play WITHOUT you or another adult organizing the games or solving the spats. If you’d like your school to start a 'Play Club' like that, here is the free implementation guide put out by Let Grow," she shared some resources. "Look it over and consider giving it to your child’s teacher or principal! Or if you’d like to start a Play Club on your own, on your block, or at your church/synagogue/mosque, or at home, here is the Let Them Play Kit from Let Grow for parents—also free."
When my kids was potty training, he was in a phase where he loved temporary tattoos. We used tattoos as a reward for a successful potty trip. He got so he was covered on both arms, back and chest. We didn't think much of it, living in Seattle, until one summer day we took him to the wading pool. For one of the first times in public, we took his shirt off, and he strode out into the pool with his toddler abs, and Thomas the tank train shorts, looking like he had just finished a hard set of reps at the free weights in the prison yard.
I was waiting for the part where there was a fully tattooed guy at the pool and the kid would yell "He must be fully potty trained, mommy!"
He was straight out the big house what did you expect?
Load More Replies...Same with my little the school started in on me until they saw my arms were covered
the English in there isn't that bad. and maybe English isn't there first language? gotta stop making comments like these otherwise you'll be banned if you get too many down votes
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My 5 year-old son woke up with his voice hoarse from a cold.
Me: oh, you’ve got a cold.
Him, solemnly: no, I think i’m a man now.
Sincerely, I love that someone was talking to him about puberty so that he knew about voices changing even at age 5.
Btw- the book the child is reading, Tom's Midnight Garden, is one of the most magical and bittersweet time travel books ever written
Bored Panda wanted to get Skenazy's opinion about how parents can help their children stay active and curious as they grow and mature. What's more, we were very curious about restoring kids' confidence in themselves (if they should ever lose it!).
"Old-time wisdom says: When you fall off the horse, get back ON the horse. It’s the same with goofing up on a test, a stage, a playing field. Failure is inevitable at some point. But! That point is not forever. Get up and try again—especially after a little more practice—and you will see the new
outcome for yourself. Simply reassuring a kid (or adult) that they’ll be fine does not do the trick. They have to try again," the president of Let Grow shared with Bored Panda.
Of course, failing is never fun, but Skenazy noted that it's all part of the learning curve. "In fact, it IS the learning curve: Your brain learns BEST when it is challenged or gets something wrong. So we have to give our kids a chance to do something on their own and realize: this is a little scary, I might fail, but it is also thrilling! Kids climb trees for exactly that experience!" she said.
My son, 4 at the time, was (I guess) trying to impress the 6 year old neighbor girl. He leaned casually on his arm and said, "I have lots of accidents. Pee and poop accidents."
I hope for his sake his pick up lines improve.
Funny enough, the Jubilee Hot Seat pickup artist video just came out
My 8 year old son's doctor was trying to make him comfortable during an EKG by telling him he had to leave his ear with the doctor. They went back and forth for a while and finally the doctor said he would trade him the ear for a lollipop. My son said he would not give up his ear but wanted the lollipop. The doctor said, "What! That is not a fair trade. What will you give me for the lollipop?"
My son answered dead serious, "I get the lollipop and you get my respect."
What do you need to leave your ear with the doctor for? Or is he just playing?
What does this mean? Is the doctor joking or does the child have to leave his hearing aid or what?
I think the doc was just playing, like pretending you’ve got the child’s nose game.
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When my son was about 5 we went to visit relatives in the Washington, DC area. We were on the Metro when my son eyed a very pretty professional young woman. "I've got a lot of blocks," he told her. "If you come to my room I'll show you." Then he made motorcycle noises for about 10 seconds.
Dang, that's all I gotta do? I've been overthinking it all along! /j. Seriously though, nothing works.
Load More Replies...Meanwhile, when it comes to boosting curiosity and engagement with the world, you can't install these into kids by saying something like, 'Look at this leaf. Isn't it interesting?"
"The kid becomes the consumer of the experience, not the creator. It’s the difference between being in the driver’s seat and the passenger seat: The driver notices everything because they have to. They are alert, curious, processing information. The passenger is passive. In our culture, we turn kids into 'passengers' by presenting them with information, rather than giving them some freedom to go out, explore, and fall in love with the world by making their way IN it."
According to Skenazy, the solution to this passiveness is for parents to loosen the reins. "Let your kids do some things on their own: ride their bike, run an errand, walk to school, play outside. If you’d like your school to encourage this kind of independence so ALL the kids in a class, or grade, or school district start venturing beyond their comfort zone, suggest they assign The Let Grow Project: Kids get the homework assignment to 'go home and do something new, on your own,'" she said.
"Whole neighborhoods come alive with kids again! The Project Implementation Guide is FREE—here! And if you’d like to see how kids can become more confident and active once their parents trust them with some independence, check out this 2-minute video of incredibly ANXIOUS kids who grew much more confident and engaged after they did The Let Grow Project… 20 times! Curiosity breeds engagement, independence breeds curiosity. This mom couldn’t believe how much her daughter was ready for until she let go a little bit. Good luck! Email us with your story of new independence: Info@LetGrow.org!" Skenazy urged parents to encourage their children to be more independent and share their success stories.
When my son was 5, a waitress at Applebees asked him how old he was, to which he exclaimed, "I'm 5 and I pooped today!" I think everyone within 4 tables of us was very impressed.
The picture doesn't always relate to the post, they just put a picture there to ... have something to look at, I guess.
Load More Replies...My daughter informed the check out lady at the grocery store that her Dad had fur on his back...
My daughter (3) can poop in the back yard without anyone knowing. I picked it up for weeks wondering why the dog's poop looked so weird. I looked out of the sliding glass door one day while my girls were playing. I saw my 3 year old pooping in the middle of the yard. Her older sister (5) sprayed her with the water house as soon as the log hit the ground. It was a spectacular scene, and I will never let them forget it.
Sassy Niece after 1st day in school: "I learned how to count to eleventy today, I bet you can't!" Weird flex but... wait.
I indeed cannot count to eleventy.
I'm not so sure. If we follow standard conventions, it's probably 110.
Load More Replies...Confidence is to be celebrated! It helps us push through failure, embrace mistakes, and chase our dreams with energy and creativity. However, confidence can morph, run wild, and turn into entitlement and arrogance if left unchecked.
Generally speaking, being proud of who you are and believing in yourself and your abilities is a great thing. However, putting others down to raise yourself up or believing that they are somehow ‘beneath you’ is crossing the line. Parents have a lot of power when it comes to shaping their children’s sense of confidence. And a lot can be said about what values a particular family prioritizes by looking at how they tackle special days like birthdays.
"When someone's sense of entitlement begins to encroach on the rights or good nature of others, then it's become a problem that the overly entitled person will need to address if they want to continue to enjoy the company of others," Suzanne Degges-White, Ph.D., was kind enough to explain to Bored Panda recently.
"It's normal to want to feel 'special' on special days, but when friends begin to resent you for the level of 'special treatment’ you feel you deserve, it's time to back down and remember that everyone deserves to be thought of as special and treated with equal respect,” the licensed counselor and professor at Northern Illinois University said.
While leaving a family gathering, my cousin asked my little boy for a fist bump. My child refused, cousin said 'come on, why no fist bump?' My kid, 5 at the time, looks him straight in the eye and says 'I don't want to break every bone in your arm'.
Is it just me or does every kid on here sound better than my 13yo asš?
i am a whole teenager and could not come up with a response half this good
My three year old said she wanted to be a scientist. I was so proud. The next day we were driving and she says "Dad! There's a scientist!" It was a guy on a street corner spinning a sign for a pizza place. A sign-tist. Sigh.
when i was 3 i wanted to be my mom, not a mom my own mother. i assumed i would just morph into her or somthin
Hang in there, she may end up a juggler or stilt walker. Things could look up
My dad was a school metalwork teacher. One of my brother's friend brought him an Athletics medal to fix because they thought he did medalwork.
My son told me he doesn't need school because he already knows the name of 10 dinosaurs.
For anyone who wants to know, my son's favorite dino is the Spinosaurus.
Alright pandas! What are your favourite dinosaurs? (Mine is the Ankylosaurus)
That was my son’s favorite too. He learned to read a bit early at around 4. He loved dinosaur encyclopedias and had many of them. Was always drawing them and explaining them to me and his father. When we took him to the natural history museum, he was telling the patrons about all the fossils and skeletons… Wow, he’s 18 now and I haven’t thought about that in a long time. How time flies.
My wife?? (Oh lord, she saw this! I'm on the couch again for yet another two weeks!)
Stegosaurus - as a small kid I use to imagine them fighting T-Rexs with their tail. I was heartbroken to find out they lived about 80 million years before the T-Rex. That was two weeks ago... :(
"By making small events the 'annual birthday traditions' and including suggestions for 'giving back' to others on a birthday as a way to celebrate another year of maturity, families can raise children who don't expect to be showered with 'things' on their birthdays," the professor pointed out that parents might want to consider raising their kids to value their birthdays for other reasons besides the gift bonanzas they get.
"Traditions can include 'birthday pancakes' or 'cupcakes for breakfast' or some other celebratory start to the day. A special meal at dinner, getting out of chores on their birthday, and choosing a toy/book/clothing item to donate to a shelter or charity on the birthday are also ways to cultivate generosity and charity in children," she said that humility, kindness, and generosity are wonderful things to focus on.
"We all learn what we live and when we live in a world where we're feted and made to feel 'uber special' just by nature of a particular day rolling around on the calendar, we come to expect similar treatment throughout our lives. Small changes early on can make big differences down the road."
My son was in the tub and asked exactly how old he was.
Me: “Ummmmm...about 4 years, 10 months, and 4 days.”
After a few moments of deep thought, I heard him say quietly and reverently to himself:
“...and I haven’t been bit by a single wild animal.”
Oh man. Still kills me.
Yet you didn't ask him why he needed this information? Were there forms? Tests? Questions only a robot could answer?
Had an Amber Alert hit my phone one night while my then 6yo was playing a game on it. She asks what that was and I explained it’s a message that gets sent out of a kid gets kidnapped. She looks at it again and sees it’s for a town over two hours from where we live. She then asks me why they sent to if it’s so far away. I said because they want everyone to look and find the kid, wouldn’t you want everyone to look if you got kidnapped? They want to find the kid so they don’t get killed. She leans over close to my ear and whispers “I’m very difficult to kill”
That's the spirit! Also, do everything possible so that they can't bring you to another location...
I generally wouldn't recommend telling 6-year-olds or younger that kidnappers kill kids, but this girl can definitely handle the truth!
Great tip the police gave to my goddaughter's class. If you are on your bike and somebody tries to grab you, start screaming and try hard to never let go of the bike. Difficult to drag a kid on a bike into a vehicle.
NO SECONDARY LOCATION (for anyone who doesn't know this, it was frequently and un-necessarily taught to a group of small children once a year at almost every school for the "safety assembly".)
Was playing with figures from Pixar's Cars with a five and a three year old. The five year old was Lightning McQueen and was narrating the story. It was super mundane stuff like "Let's go get groceries" and "We need to fill up on gas" until this exchange: >Five year old: Look, there's a hitchhiker. >Me: What should we do? Are we going to pick him up? >Five year old: No. We're going to eat his skin. I haven't looked at that kid the same since.
Kids have like 0 context to horrifying things. They just know words and put them together. It's part of what makes the creepy kid trope work. I bet you an adult just recently made the kid eat a fruit or vegetable "with the skin on" and now "we eat skin" is gonna be stuck for a second.
My 7 y/o daughter didn’t want our houseguests to go in her room because that might see her awards (good grades, tae kwon doe belts). She worried they would think she was famous.
40yrs older and they should stay out of my house. And stay off the damn lawn!
Load More Replies...At 7 years old I would drag all my trophies and medals out to show anyone how was unfortunate enough to knock on our door..
My wedding day. The ring bearer (5yo) is meeting one of my groomsmen (19yo) for the first time ever. Ring bearer walks up, is introduced and he responds by going "I know where your nuts are. And, I'm the perfect height to just punch them!" Then he just stood there.
That’s terrifying, pandas who would get hurt from this most, what would your response be?
I would crouch down so we were eye to eye, and say, "I'd rather you didn't do that."
I've seen enough fail videos to know children and animals should never be part of the wedding party. I hope everything worked out alright at your wedding.
A friend of mine had two young boys. The older one,
maybe 5, was sitting with him and pointed at a white hair and said “what’s this papa?” My friend said “oh it just means I’m getting old” and his son looked at him dead serious, looked at his brother and said “Well. I guess it’s just us and mom soon, huh?”
My 7 year old said “ I know everything until you ask me a question”. Whelp, ... ok.
Tonight my 3-year-old stopped midway up the stairs and turned slowly to me and said, “Mom. Earlier. While you were out. I. Put. On. My. Pants. All. By. My. Self. “. I have no idea why he emphasized every word, but then he smirked and turned and kept climbing the stairs. Big day. The kid is really going places.
My 6 year old son recently put his foot down letting me know it was not OK for me to tell him what he could wear or not because he is allowed to have "his own fashion". Ok, fine. Shorts, sandals and one black sock it is.
Fortunately that's just a matter of taste, and not life and death.
Load More Replies...My parents let me dress myself (as long as weather ok) and I wore striped pants with a polka dot shirt because "they both have red" and my teachers loved it. One said I looked like a walking seizure
My 6-y-o stepdaughter used to pull her socks over her leggings until recently, and not tidily, either, but in a way that looked like she was hiding paper tissue balls in her socks. I tried to convince her for years that it was easier and quicker, and the socks would stay up better, if she put on the leggings over the socks (the sock over leggings/trousers is a fashion pet peeve of mine). Only recently, at 6 1/4, when she complained that her sock lumps wouldn't fit in her boots, did she condescend to try my way. Cue her astonishment at how easy my way was, how well the socks stay up, and how nicely she slips into her boots now! - - - It's another lesson on how most of the everyday wisdom we collect is just wasted when we try to spare the next generation the faults we made ourselves...
reminds me of my brother when he was five. He wanted the colour of his socks to match his underwear :D :D
"Kati, you have to eat 3 more green beans before you're excused."
"No! No more"
"3 more."
"I'm gonna eat 4 more!!"
Oh no you got me good.
I was never in this position, not to brag but I knew how to do math before I can honestly remember. I'm in the "gifted" class at my school.
I mean... It's a win for the parents, but you really need to teach this kid some better bargaining...
LOL my kid did that one time. "How about two more bites?" I said. "How about five?" She said. Deal.
'I farted...say thank you' - 4 year old
'Don't you mean excuse me?' -Dad
'SAY THANK YOU!!!' - 4 year old
I thanked him
Its either say thank you or something else may come out even less appealing
“There are lots of members of our family tree, and I’m probably the prettiest one, don’t you think?” - my daughter (to me), age 7
She is an identical twin, so kind of a weird flex.
People with identical twins: when did yours actually start identifying themselves as individuals? I treat my twin girls (22 months old) like two different people, but there's often occasions where it seems like they don't, themselves. Like, when my MIL asked who was speaking on the phone, "M" said "C!", or when one just HAS to do what the other is doing right then, or when they sync weirdly when they're not looking at each other (dancing the same, or walking in step...). Does it stay this way, even though I support their individual likes and dislikes? Because OP's story might as well happen with identical twins who just don't see the other as too separate from them, right?
My sisters are 35, and I'm not sure they've quite realised that they're separate people yet. Both have Type 1 diabetes, and they will often seem to experience each other's blood glucose fluctuations. One will feel dizzy and clammy but have a normal glucose level; she'll text her twin a warning, and it'll turn out the other twin was getting dangerously low but not feeling the symptoms. They don't even live in the same time zone.
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My toddler just threw her dinner on the floor, started clapping, yelled "HOOOOOOORRRRRRRAAAAAYYYYY!" as loudly as her little lungs could possibly allow, then looked right at me holding up her palm for a high five.
I'm sorry for laughing. In the same boat, and I wouldn't know if I should be mad or laugh if my kid did that to me!
My kids, knowing full well I hate when they jump on the couch, will make me come in from another room entirely to show me "something really cool" and then proceed to fling themselves on the couch. You get yelled at for that, dummies, why are you purposely asking me to watch you do it??
Reminds me of when my youngest was about 6 and tried to get out of a hammock hung a bit too high by herself. She wound up twisting upside-down and spilling out of it awkwardly, but landed on her feet. She immeadiately stood up straight, arms in the air like a gymnast, and proclaimed, "perfect landing!". Now everyone in the house uses that phrase whenever there's a 'near miss', haha.
The other correct proclamation would be " huzzah "
Load More Replies...When my brother was two or three he rolled down the car window to get the attention of the gas station attendant and shouted “hey mister, I got a penis!” He had a mullet, if that helps paint a better picture.
Flashbacks to when my eldest daughter was 4. She, her 3 year old sister and her 1 year old sister had just been picked up from daycare by me and we were catching the bus home. I was struggling getting the double buggy on the bus along with holding the youngest and trying to steer the middle one up the steps. Simultaneously trying to get out my wallet to pay for the tickets. My eldest got on first and stopped at the driver and I thought she was going to tell the driver how many tickets we needed but to my horror she asked this question. Do you have a big p*nis or a little one? He ignored her though I heard giggles from some of the other passengers. I gave him money for the ticket and tried to get the buggy and 3 kids to some seats when eldest shouted to the driver, do you have a big p*nis or a little one? Everyone on the bus thought it was hilarious. I didn't. When I got home I called daycare and asked if they knew why she would say that. Apparently they just combined the bathrooms so
Were unisex and my 4 year old saw a p*nis for the first time and had questions. The teacher tried to explain the differences and unfortunately my daughter also wanted to know if boys got bigger when they got older. She had replied yes and apologised profusely to me. She was taken off guard by the question. My daughter still remembers asking the driver and almost 25 years later is still incredibly embarrassed about it.
My nephew is 4 and thinks he's cooler than everyone else because he can tuck in his shirt by himself.
When I was an after school tutor for primary school kids, I excused a boy to the bathroom. He came back telling me he made the 'biggest poo' in the world. He intentionally didn't flush so that I could come look at it. I told him that was great, but it was art time. He said his big poo was art.
When my first son was 2, out of no where while his father, my father and he were watch sponge bob, my son just comes up and tells my that when he was in my belly "some bald guy kept asking him if he wanted some ice cream!!..." Among a few other things he said but, that line made me cry we were all laughing so hard. He is now 23 and once in awhile I'll tell him And his face turns red.
The first picture message i ever received on cell phone was from my sister...her poop. We were 22/23ish. Sigh
A few years ago I visited the Picasso museum. One piece of art was awful, the tour guide made some comment about how Picasso was such a genius that he could turn anything into art. I asked, "like this fecal smear on plywood?"
When I was young, my little sister nearly failed *kindergarten*: she didn't know the alphabet. In fact she didn't bother trying to learn it. When asked why she said: "I don't need to learn my letters because I'm *pretty*."
I almost failed because I couldn't walk a balance beam. One of the teachers had to take me out of class to work on it.
Why was that a requirement? That seems so arbitrary and unnecessary.
Load More Replies...When we first started dating, my wife was a model, and she often joked that she was too pretty to need to know how to cook. I'll have to ask if she started this young!
When my son was about 6, he was in the back seat with a friend, and he boasted that he had once thrown up his entire Chinese dinner on his bedroom carpet and you could see the food and everything.
PSA. Down votes get people banned, sometimes permanently. They are not dislike buttons. They are supposed to be used as a reporting system for comments that are harassing, hateful and spam, not comments that are different than your opinion or you don't agree with or may not understand. BP does not check the comments, and if someone is down voted they get an automated message that they have been banned for suspicious activity. Please save the down votes for people who really deserve it. Zara the squid did nit deserve Down votes.
My son kept asking me something and I said "You have already asked me that twice " and he said "I will ask three times".
Or, they just can't hear, like my brother. He was born with deformed ear tubes.
My mother and I once had a discussion about this, thanks to my niece: We concluded that there's several reasons to ask the same question several times: 1) They weren't listening. 2) They didn't understand your answer (and hope you'll explain differently this time). 3) They are meta-learning about the flexibility of truth and wonder if your answer will change or give them new insights. 4) They studied learning psychology and know that repetition is the mother of learning. 5) They just like talking to you, no matter about what. - - - Did I miss something?
I have been told that years ago when my SO’s daughter was around 5, he had gotten a serious back injury that put him into the hospital. She went to visit him and told him to “Suck it up, Princess”
What are the odds that he had said that to her at some point prior? 5 year olds are like little sponges - hear and repeat. My neighbours little one has recently discovered the F word and uses it. A lot. Its hard not to LOL.
Load More Replies...~Obligatory not a parent disclaimer~ When I was in kindergarten, one of the boys came up to me and said, “I’m so strong I brush my teeth without water”. It’s always stuck with me because I was genuinely impressed. I ran around all day sharing the news as if it were some miraculous superpower or something.
Good for that kid I would destroy my gums if I didn't use water........
My daughter had a paper from school that she brought home. On the paper it said “If I had a million dollars I would...” and all the kids had to put their answer. My daughter wrote that she would pop out her eye balls. When I asked her about it later she explained how she wanted to pop out her eye balls and replace them with chocolate eyeballs.
My oldest told me she used to control me from the inside when she was in my tummy.
I guess you're a female roach... another thing to add to the lore list!
Load More Replies...When my first son was 2, out of no where while his father, my father and he were watch sponge bob, my son just comes up and tells my that when he was in my belly "some bald guy kept asking him if he wanted some ice cream!!..." Among a few other things he said but, that line made me cry we were all laughing so hard. He is now 23 and once in awhile I'll tell him And his face turns red. ((*Re posted from comment I made below.for some reason this is like third time my comment appeared under the wrong post or comment on BP, that's so weird. And that #33 wasn't even in list when I was scrolling I'm sure of it. Smh))
My son started 2nd grade this week. A couple of weeks ago the school sent out postcards with the date and time of the "open house" and his teacher's name. I asked him if he was excited to be in Mrs. So-and-so's class, and he said yes, but he's also worried. I asked what he was worried about and he said "what if she falls in love with me and wants to marry me?" I laughed and reassured him that he need not worry, since she's already married.
Not my kid - but a friend of mine was trying to teach his daughter to pick up her toys when she was younger. When she didn't do it one time, he told her he was going to throw away everything that was still on the floor. She picked them up and put them in the trash can for him.
This was my two youngest 🙄 No punishment fazed them at all. I took everything away for a month. Np. Ground them for weeks, oh well. Infuriating for the parent 😂😂
Son once told me I should pick up his toys since I bought them for him!
When my sister was younger she told her teacher that my dad was a clown. He actually owns an autobody shop but I guess she thought he was a pretty funny.
Apparently the parent / teacher conference was hilarious.
"Your daughter tells us you're a clown? What an...interesting career."
"I'm not tired. I'm never tired. I don't sleep. I just wait."
this reminds me of when i was babysitting my cousin. When it;s time for he to go to bed she says "But I don't need to sleep. I'm nocturnal." She was like 4. I don't know where she learned that word
When my daughter was I think 8, we were in the pool throwing a beach ball around. I tossed it to her. She catches it then says to me "Is that all you've got, old man?" LOL!
Not a parent, but I teach swimming lessons. This one 5 year old first day of lessons was like, "I'm not very good at kicking."
So I said, "That's okay. Nobody is perfect at everything."
Dead serious he just goes, "No, I'm perfect at everything."
He’s not my kid, but my nephew. He likes to call my attention and then does a run and jump or spins around. He thinks he’s the s**t and I let him think that because he’s a cute little dude.
Omg I actually laughed at some of these.. I don't really literally laugh at posts much either. Thanks I really need positivity lately xxx
Idk if you needed this but i love you, you're gonna get through this <3
Load More Replies...Daughter was 3 or so at the time. During her bath she was asking about the differences between boys and girls (son is 7 years older) etc. As we leave the bathroom, hubby is sitting on the bed watching TV. She looks at him and says "Daddy, when I grow up I'm going to have breasts just like you!" I had to leave the room I laughed so hard! Hubby, bless his heart, just said "Yes, you will." 🤣
Omg I actually laughed at some of these.. I don't really literally laugh at posts much either. Thanks I really need positivity lately xxx
Idk if you needed this but i love you, you're gonna get through this <3
Load More Replies...Daughter was 3 or so at the time. During her bath she was asking about the differences between boys and girls (son is 7 years older) etc. As we leave the bathroom, hubby is sitting on the bed watching TV. She looks at him and says "Daddy, when I grow up I'm going to have breasts just like you!" I had to leave the room I laughed so hard! Hubby, bless his heart, just said "Yes, you will." 🤣
