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Parenting is an obligation you cannot be careless about. How your child turns out will always reflect how you raised them and the environment in which they grow up. And if you mess up, your son or daughter will likely feel the effects for the rest of their life. 

These people are sharing what the messed-up parenting practices they endured and are continuing to deal with, in some way. Some of them are about inconsistent rules, while others were stories about getting berated for having a different opinion. 

If you’re a product of what you think is toxic parenting, we would love to hear your insights in the comments. 

#1

Family sitting silently at the table, showing moments related to ways parents fail at raising kids and communication issues. Telling the kid they can always be honest and tell the truth, then going nuclear when they do.

dc5trbo , Getty Images Report

FranSinclair
Community Member
2 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I couldnt tell my parents anything (probably how i ended up a teen mom) so i wanted to have my baby be able to tell me anything. 2 yr old says "i gave my baby a potty bath yesterday!" I can hold that shock in well but once she started getting older and things got a bit cheekier i needed to reevaluate. Like when shes 9yr old and tell me she cheated on a test...i cant "ignore" that so since that point (about 2010) its now *if you do something you know was wrong and i find out from someone, youre in trouble. If you lie about doing something you know was wrong, you get 2x the punishment (like no phone for 2weeks instead of 1 week) BUT if you come to me as soon as you realize and we can talk about it...whatever those repercussions would have been get halfed. That baby i had at 17 is an adult now and my goodness am i lucky with how smoothly her growing up has been. We're very close and shes a great kid!

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    #2

    Teen boy in a plaid shirt using a smartphone outdoors, illustrating common ways parents fail at raising kids. Making fun of or teasing them for their romantic interests. Adolescents aren't confident. They already feel foolish. It's like kicking a pet. And it can have the effect of delaying and ruining their confidence with romantic interests.

    FalstaffsMind , Getty Images / Unsplash Report

    Spencer's slave no longer
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My oldest son, now 35, started seeing his now wife when they were 14. Did I have doubts? Absolutely. Did I voice my doubts? Absolutely. Did I mock them? Absolutely not. They've been together over 20 years, married 11 and parents for 10 years. I love them both to bits and their kids are the lights of my life. Do not mock your kids, you will miss out on the best of them. I'm editing to add that I was the one they, and their friends, called for late night pick ups, safe spaces, beds to sleep in when home turned to custard. Be the parent that all kids need, not just yours. I'm not blowing my own trumpet, I'm simply saying that kids need safe people and places when their parents/homes aren't.

    FranSinclair
    Community Member
    2 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    You know what...im 35. I had my first crush at 6 and bf at 15 (same boy) my parents never mocked, teased, or down played our interests in eachother. Our marriage has officially lasted longer than any of our parents. We broke up once when i was about 17 for a little and i felt crushed in my heart and stomach, lost, alone. 4 years ago we hit a rough patch and id seperated from him for 3 months...that whole time all i could think was "it feels exactly the same" the loss of my bf as a teen hurt just as bad as losing my husband, the father of my children, my other half. Loves love baby!!

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    Ravenkbh
    Community Member
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Every time I bring a girl home my elderly father cries "Don't date ugly people!!!!" I hate it when the girl takes his advice.

    Wonnie-Cookie713
    Community Member
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I’ve been dealing with this since I had a crush. From middle school :(

    Farah (she/her)
    Community Member
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My mums the same. Dont worry, you can rant to me if u want!

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    Earonn -
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    For some reason my uncle loved to wind me, the bullied, fearful teenage girl up. Well, his daughter had the teen pregnancy, not me. Still, what was worse that my aunt (not his wife) and my mother said nothing to stop him. Glad I've got rid of that family.

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    #3

    Young child eating a cookie at a table, illustrating common ways parents fail at raising kids in everyday moments. Making them "finish their plate," every time, regardless. Shaming them for eating too much / too little.

    Best way to encourage an eating disorder at an early age.

    crsuperman34 , Helena Lopes Report

    Michael P (Perthaussieguy)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I tried to handle dinner time with 'All of something and something of everything'. Even we adults often don't like a particular food. Don't force your kid to eat something they really don't like. But at least get them to try different foods.

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    #4

    Young girl sitting alone on a couch by the window, illustrating challenges parents face in raising kids and emotional impact. Shaming the kids for mistakes they make such as bed wetting, spilling things, etc. people make mistakes and kids need to know it’s okay to mess up sometimes.

    krys678 , Ivonne Lecou Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is a core part of my parenting philosophy. It helps my mental health as well as my kids.

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    #5

    Child covering face while sitting on bench as parent points finger, illustrating common ways parents fail at raising kids. Berating them when they have different opinion than yours. This forces them to keep their thoughts to themselves.

    deria_martell , Getty Images Report

    Luke Branwen
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    On the other hand, if my hypothetical child started to show some signs of bigotry, of course there'd be a talk. Those aren't "opinions" in my book.

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    #6

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Just generally treating kids like they're somehow below you. Everyone's just as much of a person, and generally speaking people all have a similar capacity for intelligence. Your kids aren't dumber than you and they don't have to arbitrarily reach a certain age to be your equal, the only reason they don't know as much as you is they haven't been around as long as you have/haven't had the life experiences you've had.

    You don't have to dumb yourself down to deal with kids, you just have to approach things in a way that makes sense to them based on where they are in life.

    astaten0 , Getty Images Report

    Luke Branwen
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd even say that a lot of children are more intelligent and emotionally stable than a big chunk of adults.

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    #7

    Family on couch ignoring each other while using smartphones, illustrating common ways parents fail at raising kids. Not being present when they are excited about anything. On your phone, txting, watching tv, playing games etc.

    Kids are exploring their world and making discoverys all the time. This is the perfect opportunity to boost up their self esteem by encouraging and telling them how smart and awesome they are. Its also a great bonding experience where they will look up to you.

    Nothing more defeating than finding a discovery and then getting in trouble for it.

    pplslamp420 , Getty Images Report

    Wonnie-Cookie713
    Community Member
    2 days ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Fr! And when you find something and they’re paying attention, they try to prove it wrong with their infected-by-the-expensive-rectangle minds.

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    #8

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children When losing an argument the parent doubles down and doesn’t acknowledge they may be wrong. Like ever.

    Something- problem with authority figures -something.

    anon , Getty Images Report

    Daisydaisy
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Always good to be able to say to your kids "Sorry - I was wrong - you were right". Or even "Sorry I was so crabby to you this morning. I was in a rush but I shouldn't have snapped at you like that and hurt your feelings." It means they grow up into adults who can apologise when necessary and allow themselves to make and acknowledge mistakes. Not all grown ups can do that

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    #9

    Young girl in a pink dress holding a trophy, highlighting common parenting mistakes in raising kids successfully. Basing their entire worth on achievement.


    How many "smart kids" from elementary school do you know that have trash mental health now? Probably a lot.

    anon , Getty Images Report

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My mom forced me into the Gifted And Talented program in middle school, and then pulled me out of public school after the 7th grade. She forced me to be homeschooled for 8th grade, made me take the GED when I was 13 (and I was just smart enough to be able to pass it.) She then made me start taking college classes when I was 14 YEARS OLD. I cannot even express to you the lifelong issues that caused, both in terms of burnout AND social issues/social awkwardness. I was already a weird kid with few/no friends, and making me take college classes with 18-20 year olds was... well, honestly, kind of traumatizing. It's not the only thing that gave me mental health issues, but I'm definitely a classic example of the "effed up 'gifted' kid" stereotype you hear about. Oh, and I'm not that smart. I never was. My mom just wanted bragging rights and the ability to say that her daughter was a genius who started college at age 14.

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    #10

    Two children sitting by a window, highlighting challenges parents face in raising kids and common parenting failures. Forcing an older child to wait a certain amount of time before they are granted a luxury and then not making a younger sibling wait that same amount of time before they get that same luxury.

    It teaches the older child that the younger is the favorite and leads to a lot of resentment from the older child both towards the parents and the younger sibling.

    anon , Jess Zoerb Report

    Lost Panda
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Vice versa as well. Don't allow the oldest to have/do XYZ and then postpone the younger kids. It happens both ways. *Edit: Wanted to add that I don't mean if old sibling gets a phone the little one does too, but rather the young one gets the phone at the same age to older one, barring any external reasoning.*

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    #11

    Young boy on bike wearing helmet near playground closed with caution tape showing ways parents fail at raising kids. Not allowing your child to be angry. I see it so many times with friend’s kids or relatives. Children get mad and react and the adult immediately says something along the lines of “fix your attitude”. Children have emotions too and need to be taught to express and work through them in order to be a part of civilized society.

    emilita29 , Mick Haupt Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It is okay to be angry, it isn't okay to lash out. That being said it is impossible to not lash out all the time.

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    #12

    Father and upset child at playground, highlighting common ways parents fail at raising kids and ensure emotional support. Using your kid as a joke. Like doing or saying something to get a reaction out of them for an audience.

    Redbronze1019 , Polina Kuzovkova Report

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Reminds me of the cake my mom got for me for my 7th or 8th birthday (can't remember exactly what year it was.) I'll attach a pic of it in another comment. When my mom walked out of the kitchen and set it down on the table in front of my friends, cousins, and extended family members, she was laughing hysterically. I read what was on the cake and started crying (because, you know, I was like 7.) My mom INSISTED it was "just a joke". Even if it was (I doubt it, she's actually a mean person) - it was the kind of joke you can have with your ADULT children if you have a good relationship with them. It's NOT something you "joke" about with your 7-year-old who knows she's adopted and knows she was only adopted because you didn't want your biological child to be an only child.

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    #13

    Father and child sitting outdoors having a serious conversation, illustrating common ways parents fail at raising kids. Using your kid as your therapist. Your kid will want to make you feel better, and they might be very good at emotional support. It'll seem easy. The fallout doesn't happen until a decade or two down the road. You're there to support your kid, not the other way around.

    singularjame , Sandra Seitamaa Report

    Wonnie-Cookie713
    Community Member
    2 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Sometimes parents treat their kids like emotionless stressballs. There’s a story on YouTube that a lady would shove a hot iron on her kids limbs to relieve stress.

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    #14

    Teen girl in a bedroom holding a book, reflecting on parenting challenges and ways parents fail at raising kids. Helicopter parenting. Mine was to the point of total isolation. I wasn’t allowed to go to school (I got pulled out and home schooled), go in my backyard, or even visit friends without a parent present until I was 18.

    10CloverfieldPain , Andrej Lišakov / Unsplash Report

    WindySwede
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is the reason I hate homeschooling!

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    #15

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Screaming at your child until they don’t know right from left then being overtly kind to pull them in closer.
    Breeds all sorts of anger issues, trust issues and resentment.

    Continually bragging about things your child is not proud of to other people. Cheapens the experience being shared, & the annoyance company inevitably feels makes you afraid of the limelight. The connection with the parent also feels more superficial.

    Any kind of “being harder to make them hard” kind of treatment. I get saying “no” when necessary but teaching a child that the pain their own family inflicts on them is for the sake of growth will either make the child passive or feel like a martyr.

    dzyrider , Getty Images Report

    Stardrop
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    HEAVY on the first one. i hate when my parents scream at me, then get mad at me for crying, then get even more mad at me when i don't want to be "comforted"

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    #16

    Stressed parents sitting on a couch with baby, illustrating common ways parents fail at raising kids challenges and struggles. Playing the victim card whenever something goes wrong. The child will adopt a similar reaction to problems when they occur and no one will get anywhere productively.

    anon , Curated Lifestyle Report

    #17

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Never accepting your kid is right and that you are wrong sometimes. Never letting your kid gain confidence in their opinion.
    Sometimes, you owe your kid a big apology and don’t get mad when your kid speaks back to you, it’s called a debate.

    EMC1894 Report

    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My kids are very good at talking back to me (respectfully, mind!). It's something I've always encouraged, and I'll always listen even if I completely disagree.

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    #18

    Child sitting on a couch using a tablet late at night, highlighting common parents fail at raising kids issues. Here's an iPad, now leave me alone.

    anon , Nils Huenerfuerst Report

    Luke Branwen
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Older people smugly complain about "phone-a******d iPad kids" while not realizing it was THEM who gave them the iPad in the first place when parenting became too much of a burden for their mental well-being and employment.

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    #19

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Being too focused on money.

    We were lower middle class growing up, but my mom was always so fixated on how much everything cost that it kind of messed me up. Even though I’m comfortably middle class, probably upper middle class, I still find myself focused on the price of everything. I can’t bring myself to buy anything full price even though I can afford it. I have a hard time throwing things away because I spent money on them or because they could be reused.

    usehernamechexout , Artem Beliaikin Report

    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It always amazes me how 'class' in America is determined by how mch money you have. That's not classy at all!

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    #20

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Divorced parents;
    DO NOT USE YOUR CHILDREN AS LEVERAGE!
    DO NOT TEACH YOUR KIDS TO HATE THE OTHER PARENT

    I can not all caps enough! My parents went through a divorce so messy it was in iur state newspapers. My mother treated me and my sister as property not children, and she attempted to teach us to hate our father.
    I spent years influences by this. When I lived on my own as an adult I realized just how messed it all was. Thankfully my dad is literally the nicest person in the world it just took forever to realize it...
    It messes up kids for years, self-esteem issues, emotional growth, and overall a jaded perspective. Please don’t.

    vasaryo Report

    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My parents split when I was 5. My father never said a single bad word about her. Not one. I remembered that forever.

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    #21

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children I think a modern development that's pretty bad for children is over scheduling. There is pressure to have your children doing lots of activities, either at home or additional classes and sports and so on. Some of that is great obviously and it's always good to give a child access to the resources they need that might make them thrive or to pursue a hobby they enjoy.

    But it gets taken too far in some cases and some people won't let their children rest or relax unless they are doing something educational and productive. I think that creates neurotic adults who get stressed and never feel that what they do is good enough. I suspect it's a factor in some people having mental breakdowns too.

    Learning to relax is a life skill too.

    Waitingforadragon Report

    Luke Branwen
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    IMO it creates good, obedient employees who know that free time is a luxury they don't always get to have. And then you wonder why the society is Like That.

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    #22

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Never allow their kids to express their emotions. I wasn't allowed to cry or get visibly upset, and for a long time, this forced me to adopt bad coping habits where I would scratch at my skin until I bled or pulled my hair out. I still can't handle conflict well.

    akraft96 Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Express emotions or repress them. One of these works better. Coping is for adults - I hope.

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    #23

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Giving toddlers tablets, and small children phones. There's a reason why tech giants raise their own children device free.

    RoryRabideau Report

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We didn't have tablets or cellphones when I was a kid, but my mother definitely would buy every game console on the market and tell me to "leave her alone and play games".

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    #24

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Saying "Because I said so", or "I'm the mother/Father". Thanks for the lack of logical sense.

    User_identificationZ Report

    Luke Branwen
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "You have to do it because I'm the parent and I say so" often evolves into "You have to do it because I'm the boss and I say so" or, even worse, "I'm the husband and I say so". Teach kids to call out this BS.

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    #25

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Just getting them in trouble without talking time after the situation is over and taking about it. Parenting takes time, and if you don't go talk to your kids after, you aren't doing your job.

    Here is what you did. What were you thinking when you did it? What was your perspective? Okay now that I understand what your position was before it happened, what are some other ways you could have dealt with that in another manner? If someone did that to YOU, what could they done instead that YOU would be most responsive to?

    Just questions like that. Don't talk AT them, talk WITH them. Go on a journey together and find a better way.

    Let them know what the punishment is for their action (and ideal punishments make the situation right, they arent just aimless "go to your room" punishments). You are now going to save your money by doing their chores for them, and use that money to replace the thing you broke. That kind of thing.

    Make sure they know to you love them. That they know you are there for them. That they know you would have their back if this was done to them. And that making things right is what adults do, and you think they are ready to start adult training, because they are a very mature kid that you are very proud of.

    Suuperdad , Curated Lifestyle Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    An impressive list of ways to get bad things to become better. Upvote OP.

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    #26

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children One I havent seen yet is, opposed to being a helicopter parent, being completely absent from their life and giving them no sense of responsibility, discipline or accountability.

    My mom who I lived with for the majority of my childhood did *nothing* to prepare us for the real world. We were never even asked to cook, clean, do our homework, brush our teeth, etc.

    I only started learning at like 12 or 13 because my dad took it upon himself to show me.

    And those all sound like simple tasks but when you grow up not being expected to, certain habits like cleaning up after yourself or brushing your teeth *can* be challenging to get into when its so easy to just...not do it.

    Generous_lions , Getty Images Report

    Aileen Grist
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    my mother taught me absolutely nothing about personal hygiene

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    #27

    Never telling your child no. I see parents all too often never telling them no and negotiating with them. How will they ever be successful in life if they have no consequences because parents never say no or cave in to every whim?

    lilshells313 Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There's a lot of living in between "Never saying no" and "Having boundaries". Maybe negotiation might be a default, with the occasional situation that needs sharp and clearly defined boundaries. I said 'occasional ' !

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    #28

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Giving children no privacy.

    Just because it’s your kids doesn’t mean that they are extensions of yourself and shouldn’t be allowed secrets and a personal life.

    marshroom7 Report

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We were NEVER allowed to close any doors in my house, ever, let alone lock them. Even when we were going to the bathroom or taking a shower - we weren't allowed to close the door. I remember taking showers and my mom would walk into the bathroom and start doing her makeup, or would use the toilet, and I always felt so horribly exposed. When I started getting older, she'd criticize my developing body and say nasty things about how I looked when she'd come into the bathroom. (We had clear glass door shower doors too, not a shower curtain, so she could see right into the shower and see me completely náked.) It was completely baffling to me when I used to spend time at my boyfriend's house when I was 18 and I could CLOSE THE DOOR when I was taking a shít.

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    #29

    Upset girl covering ears while parent points finger, illustrating common parents fail at raising kids moments. Inconsistent rules. If you say "no X until you have finished Y" enforce it. If you don't mean it, don't say it. If you as a parent don't have the discipline to enforce the rules you make, how can you expect your child to learn anything positive about discipline or rules?

    DentedAnvil , Getty Images Report

    Lost Panda
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Additionally: If your co-parent instills a punishment (that is reasonable for the offense) you also enforce it. Do not throw your partner's work out the window.

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    #30

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Punishing emotions and the reaction instead of teaching emotional control and accountability for one's actions.

    Cursethewind Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Punishing and teaching aren't mutually exclusive.

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    #31

    Never saying "I love you" and never hugging them.

    Andrei___ Report

    Auntriarch
    Community Member
    2 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My parents have never told me that they love me, but you don't have to feel sorry for me, because they've spent the last 67 years showing me that they do. And they're great huggers.

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    #32

    49 Horrible Parenting Mistakes Anyone Should Avoid Doing To Their Children Raising boys with the goal of "damage control". IE, assuming he's a monster and then trying to "correct for it".

    geezerblab Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My only suggestion for raising boys is - catch them doing something right! And praise them for it. Any later punishments for wrong-doing will be remembered against that back-cloth.

    #33

    Let's see:

    1. Mom is a hoarder, could never have friends over

    2. My sister many years before me was a wild one and resulted in me not allowed to go to friends house.

    3. No acknowledgement that puberty was a thing and the wonderful horror that was my first period


    4. Going clothes shopping when you don't have a lot of money generally means buying up one or two sizes. I didn't have properly fitting clothes until I made my own money and bought my own clothes

    5. My mom and dad stayed together for my sake when they really should have split when I was four or five. I did not have a healthy romantic relationship modeled at all.

    The result was I am kind of socially incompetent, fashion sense is severely lacking, can't do makeup and don't have the confidence for it, and will only spend a Max of 3 days at my mom's house per year, over Christmas.

    indigoassassin Report

    Stardrop
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    my parents never had any form of "the talk" with me. i learned everything i had to via books from the library. honestly im just glad i got it from there and not the internet.

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    #34

    Kicking a kid out.

    It's been 23 years. I move every year like clockwork and can't stay in one place because I'm still looking for a home. Every time my husband I had a disagreement for the first three years of our marriage I started packing so I could leave before he kicked me out, which he would never do. I assume everyone will get rid of me if I'm not perfect. I serial quit jobs because I don't want to face any rejection such as being fired, so as soon as things aren't 100 percent I get scared and run.

    Not only did my mother kick me out at 15, she lied to children's services and said I just wouldn't come home. But every time I tried to go home I wasn't allowed in or she would attack me in a way that didn't leave marks until I got scared and took off. Since children's services and my school didn't help me I ended up not trusting anyone to help me. She eventually must have been getting some heat from children's services because she hit herself while I was there and called the police to say I made scratches on her. Then children's services wouldn't help me, no one would and because I was under charges I got kicked out of school. I ended up on the streets, hitchhiking in the rain in November with no jacket because she said I didn't own one when the cops came. The cops dropped me off at the most dangerous highway and told me to figure out a way to a friend or family members house.

    And since 15 is a vulnerable age, I attracted people who hurt me and used me. Pure sociopaths. But since the authorities never helped me before because my mother would lie, I didn't trust them to help me then.

    My mother also refused to let me have a bedroom for two years before kicking me out and I slept wherever I could meaning if someone was watching tv I didn't get to sleep until they were done. Until I married my husband ten years later I just passed out wherever despite having a bed because I was taught beds were for good people and I wasn't good.


    Also, treating your kid with differing expectations, as though they are less than even their friends and siblings. I didn't consider myself a person with the same rights as other people from about age 3. It led to a lot of hurt because I figured I didn't have the same rights as everyone else.


    The good news is, I don't have anything to do with that psycho. None of us do. She can explain to all the people she spoke badly about me to why none of her children speak to her. I make good money and sleep in a super fancy bed now. I make more money in a year than she does in a decade. It took awhile to get over all the things, and I'm still working on it, but I didn't turn out like her.

    anon Report

    Brian Droste
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I am so sorry that you had to ho through all of that as a child. I am so glad that you are doing whole lot better.

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    #35

    Teaching them to fear authority by policing their every move. Not allowing them to make some of their own decisions or have a say in what happens in their lives. Refusing to listen to their opinions and speaking over them, I think the most damaging thing my father has ever done to me was not allowing me to share my point of view or talk back to him in any way. It made me dangerously submissive and allowed me to get myself into situations that could have been avoided if I knew how to say “no”.

    scomixio Report

    #36

    Being anti-vaxx.

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    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My kids are both extremely grateful for getting them fully vaccinated. The alternative is insane.

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    #37

    Acting like they’re incapable of feeling stressed or sad and telling them they’re just looking for attention when they try to talk about it.

    lefthandruler Report

    Stardrop
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    kids are people guys!! not mindless clones :/

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    #38

    Getting mad at them for crying. Like how about finding out why they're crying and talking to them about it, even if it's just to make them realize they don't really have to cry about it? Apparently talking for some parents is overrated.

    hetplay7 Report

    Stardrop
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    newsflash: "STOP CRYING" or "i'll give you something to cry about!!" just makes the person cry harder.

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    #39

    Making a kid clean their plate or letting them eat without regulation.

    As someone with an eating disorder, free access to cereal after school and then having to clean my plate every night meant I was obese by fourth grade

    I wish my parents had paid more attention to what I was eating and not so much time demanding I eat everything presented to me.

    anon Report

    Daisydaisy
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I heard today of a mother teaching her kids to "leave a bit for Lady Manners". I wish I'd been taught that, frankly!

    #40

    Not talking to your child in an age appropriate manner about appropriate things

    Thanks Mom. I don't really need to know how much of a baby you think my dad is because he needed time to grieve my still born older sister.

    moonshineboom Report

    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was considered the irresponsible parent at my kids' schools because I openly discussed drûgs with them. They were going to be exposed to them (this is reality, not a fantasy world!), so I thought it better to get proper information from me. They learned what was dangerous, and why not to do anything at all, even alcohol or tobacco, before 18. After 18 I helped them understand the good, bad and ugly of it all. Neither abûse anything as adults.

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    #41

    Joking about your child not getting A's on their assignments, report cards, etc. While it's nice that you want them succeed and be good at what they're learning, it doesn't mean they're actually learning. Plus it makes them feel as if what they do is never good enough and make them constantly desire validation with everything they do.
    Also, not letting them go out and do after school activities. If they have to fight to do something they're interested in then eventually they'll stop fighting and just become a recluse with no useful social skills or skills that jobs desire.

    loiwhat Report

    Lost Panda
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Our house has a "As long as you try" mentality. If you try and get a 0, I won't be mad. If you do not try at all, that is a different story.

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    #42

    Teaching girls that their looks are the most important thing about them. Tell girls they’re smart, brave, etc. It’s not fair to only say “oh she’s so pretty” and make this the one thing girls expect to be complimented on. This goes hand in hand with encouraging body issues at a young age. I remember mom telling me at 9 that the piece of bread I was eating would go to my hips... I was already under BMI.

    anon Report

    Luke Branwen
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This "better dead than fat" mentality overall needs to die

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    #43

    Staying in a loveless/unhappy relationship "for the kids". One, your kids know you're miserable. Two, they learn how relationships work from you--do you want them to have a relationship like yours?

    hytone Report

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My mom was abúsíve towards my dad - emotionally, verbally, psychologically, AND physically. She would start screaming arguments with him and then start to hit him, punch him, kick him, and if she was REALLY píssed off, she would get a butcher knife from the kitchen and would cut his arms, back, or chest (not stabs, just like cuts/slices, not so deep to need stitches, but they bled heavily.) My dad was born in '42 and believed that men should not put their hands on women/their wives, so he never fought back. I used to beg him to divorce her (and take me with him, because she was abúsíve in all the same ways towards me) but he said he "couldn't break up the family". My dad was a great dad, but I wish he'd been stronger and braver in that regard - he would have saved BOTH of us from years of abúse. BTW - when my sister was a teenager, she starting joining in with my mom in abúsíng my dad - she would scream at and attack my dad too. It was horrifying to me as a kid.

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    #44

    Punishing them for telling the truth

    Treating the relationship like they were assigned to live together, rather than being an affectionate family

    Subtly indoctrinating them to think everything you morally oppose will k**l you

    Treating them like a baby when they’re a legal adult

    Say “don’t compare yourself to others” then proceed to compare the kid to others

    “I’m right because I’m the adult and you’re just a kid” or “because I said so”

    Acting like their life is over if they get a C in a class

    Making inflammatory statements then punishing them when they get upset

    I can bring up many more things I believe have turned me into a socially incompetent, emotionally confused, and probably dysthymic high school senior.

    Manatee_Madness Report

    Stardrop
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    the don't compare is so real, because my parents INSIST they don't compare me, but they literally do all of the time- "do your friends get grades like this?" or "oh x cousin got an A+ in that class, you should do better."

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    #45

    Putting too much of an emphasis on college, grades, etc. I'm a senior now and I'm seeing many kids going down bad paths because their parents told them they have to have all As and go to an Ivy. It's rediculous the amount of pressure this is putting on students.

    AJ2100 Report

    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My son went to Uni and could have got a first (as I did 😎). He was prioritising work in his final semester, however, so only got a 2:1. I agreed that a career was just as important, so supported him in that. My daughter never showed any inclination to get a degree, and I accepted that. She is now doing one as a mature student, which is great. I did the same after dropping out from uni because I was kinda forced into it at 17.

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    #46

    Doing everything for them.

    sumofitsparts Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I can't believe I'm saying this, but sports help kids learn, and parents have learn to stand on the sidelines and cheer. *That* is education ...

    #47

    Not supporting their interests, or only supporting what you view as “worth it”. I tried a lot of different things as a kid, trying to find myself, as I’m sure most kids do. Parents stopped showing up to concerts because “well the band isn’t very good”, or soccer games when we had a losing record. I remember getting yelled at for wasting my time with sports if we weren’t going to win. Was told going into college that theater wasn’t worth pursuing because it isn’t a “safe” career. The only real encouragement I got was when it came to academics (it will possibly not come as a surprise that my dad works in academia).

    Now nearly a decade out of college, no real career after trying and burning out on two grad school programs, primarily from some heavy anxiety even completing assignments if they weren’t going to be perfect. I wish I had pursued something I was passionate about, instead of dropping them one at a time because they weren’t “worth it”.

    PirateGoesYar Report

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I took (and passed) a physics class in college. When I told my mom about taking the class, her first reactions was, "Physics. Oh, ish." Hey, YOU aren't taking it, I am, so what's your problem and couldn't you, just one time in your do-nothing life, acknowledge that your daughter is succeeding at something that most people consider difficult? Apparently, she couldn't.

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    #48

    - telling boys they have to 'man up' anytime they show any signs of sadness.

    - teaching girls that it's okay to hit boys because they can't hit back or they boy will be in trouble.

    - raising the kids to think they're the most important people in the world, so they get snobby and obnoxious and bratty.

    - giving kids a tablet or phone to be on all day instead of spending quality time with them. if you need a break now and again then fine, but not when this is all day, every day.

    - demonstrating any bad behavior in front of the child, such as: shoplifting, bullying others, screaming at cashiers for something they can't help, etc.

    - allowing them to hurt an animal. Too many times do people let their kids smack dogs and cats to the point where the animal has finally had enough, and then the animal is blamed and deemed aggressive.

    Cyanide_Kitty_101 Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I feel sorry for parent who were broken as children, but the least they can do is not to continue the ábuse on their own children. You fight fire with water.

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    #49

    Making it really hard to tell them things. My mom always freaks out when I tell her anything, and then as a defense mechanism she makes fun of whatever it is that I've told her.

    I switched my major to criminal justice and she freaked out saying well good thing you don't want to be a cop, you were always so sensitive, you'd look pretty dumb crying in the uniform when someone says something mean to you.

    Thanks mom.

    Katieroowe Report

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    #50

    Any form of helicopter parenting. It's going to ensure they can't find for themselves.

    SexThePeasants Report

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    #51

    Threatening to do something when they're misbehaving and then never doing it. All you're* doing is making yourself difficult to believe and the threats will eventually have zero chance of working.

    Saying, "I won't get mad if you tell the truth" and then getting mad. This teaches them that the truth is bad and that lying at least has a chance of getting away with no punishment.

    FluffyPhoenix Report

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    LMAO My mom pulled this when I was living with her in 2012 for about a year. We were shopping at the store and I mentioned that I would like to cook something. She said why didn't I and what did I want to cook? I told her she'd get mad at me if I said anything and she told me she wouldn't. So I told her I'd like to make my potato soup and she blew up in the store, saying I didn't need to eat all those calories and it had too much bacon and I didn't need to cook that so on and so on. There was another woman standing nearby who had heard the entire conversation and we both looked at each other and started laughing while my mom continued to rage on.

    #52

    My parents loved to pull the “there are starving children in Africa!” line to get me to eat everything on my plate. I understand children are picky eaters and need nutrition and such, but they also need to learn how to regulate their own sense of hunger/satiation.

    I started off as an over eater, and became heavy, then I started starving myself to lose weight. Then I stopped and gained a ton of weight. It’s taken me decades to develop a healthy relationship with food and to learn how to manage my weight.

    ElleFuego Report

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The last time someone told me about the starving children in China, I told them to "Name names."

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    #53

    Letting your friends belittle and laugh at him.

    mrd-uyi Report

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My parents didn't need friends to do that to me - they did it themselves.

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    #54

    Giving them whatever they want; especially when you've said no once. This is when they stop taking no for an answer.

    Giving yourself more priority over them - sums up almost everything one shouldn't do to their loved ones. Treat all of family equally.

    Speedykeval Report

    #55

    Parents that are too strict when it comes to tv/movie/video game content.

    They won’t be able to socialize like normal kids.

    Banana_Flavor Report

    Papa
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Not strict enough is also a problem.

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    #56

    Spending time on a phone instead of paying attention to a crying kid.

    artemii7 Report

    #57

    Giving them 0 understanding of the value of money.

    A good friend from home has a very wealthy family. They buy him (24) new cars, let him live at home rent free when he has a decent job with the family business.

    If we go on a night out he will spend in excess of £500 on drinks for everyone. He once had £400 in notes and was buying drinks - realised he was out, and I stepped in to insist I get the round, he pulled out his card and said “no worries!”. He’s a great guy and honestly his family are lovely people, but he’s just got no understanding of what money means, and I dread to think how he would handle things if, god forbid, something happened to the endless supply of money.

    In his own head he’s doing something nice for his friends, no matter how much we try and pay.

    Comadness Report

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is something that resonates so hard with me. My parents never, not ever, sat down with me to talk about finances, checking accounts. saving for retirement, credit cards, etc. So I learned on my own, made some bad mistakes, and had to declare bankruptcy at one point. I was talking to my mom once about cleaning up my credit report and one way to do that is to get a bank-issued pre-paid credit card, where you put your own money on the card, then use it and pay it back to build up your credit again. My mother just heard "credit card" and the first words out of her mouth were her sneering, "Who would give YOU a credit card?" She and my father couldn't have been half-arsed to do the bare minimum amount of parenting to teach me about credit cards, and then she has the nerve to make fun of me because I screwed mine up previously? I almost backhanded her.

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    #58

    Kicking the kid out of the house after CPS shows up because the kid told his school counselor about the incident where you put the kid in a headlock because the kid and his little brother were horsing around.

    anon Report

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    When I was 6ish or so, my dad had to go on a business trip (he worked for IBM at the time.) My mom was furious about it for some reason, and she grabbed me and grabbed her pistol (it was small, not sure what caliber/model.) She pressed the muzzle of that gun into the soft bottom part of my jaw and said to my dad "If you leave, I'll kíll the kids and then kíll myself." He agreed to cancel the business trip. The next day at school, I told my teacher what had happened (since that was what kids were taught back then - if something bad is happening, tell a teacher or a policeman.) My mom got called in to a meeting with my teacher and the principal of the school. My mom laughed and said it hadn't happened, that I had seen a cowboy movie the previous night and I was imagining guns everywhere. They BELIEVED HER. She béat me unconscious when we got home after that. I never told a teacher or counselor about all the abúse ever again, after that. It sucked.