Every family has its own little quirks. That becomes all too obvious when strangers come to live together at some point in their lives. Think of roommates or partners who suddenly realize the most basic daily things, as well as things people think of as normal and acceptable, vary. And they vary greatly.
No wonder people grow up and realize not everything that went down in their parents’ home was actually normal. Insane cases, family rules, habits, and customs can be super weird.
Think of parents who don’t let their children laugh while lying down or kids who were allowed to take just one quick weekly shower; these are among the countless debatable family rules people confessed in these online threads.
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We had to take naps on Sunday. Every Sunday. Now that I'm older I realize that was the only chance my parents had to bang.
My parents tried to make my brother and I nap when we were small. I was too hyperactive so they gave up.
A "sock tax".
In retrospect, smart. I hated it at the time.
So, I left my dirty socks around the house. I don't know why I would be taking socks off all over the place, I was a damn kid. I guess I was sloppy and it just happened and the socks had to be off right then and there. Parents got fed up with this. And so, to get my dirty socks back, I had to pay a quarter per sock. Doesn't seem like a big deal at first, but it adds up when you're nine years old. Had to literally nickel and dime my way through a few pairs because I was running out of damn socks, I was kind of a sock deserting addict I guess. Finally got in the habit it of picking up my socks for a while and things seemed fine and then hit a heavy relapse.
Parents gave me a big a*s box of my dirty socks for Christmas that year and a few pairs of new ones. Got better after that. Typing this is making me smile, I really love my mom and dad.
My mom wouldn't let me touch my brother. A side hug was ok for pictures and making up after a fight but no cuddly stuff. And her definition of cuddly was him leaning on me on the couch when he's sick. He's 5 years younger than me and we rarely got along so anything like that was rare. It kind of messed with me when I was younger, she made me feel like I was being a pervert but I still had no idea what I was doing. Once on a car trip (I was super sick with whooping cough) I was sprawled across the back seat and my head was touching my brother's leg. She flipped out. "No. No. That's not right. Not ok. Get on your side." He was 10! I was 15! WTF mom??
Guessing mom was also an anti-vaxxer and an idiot. Kids should all be vaccinated against whooping cough and she shouldn't have been transporting a kid with a highly infectious disease in a car with a non sick kid. 15 is old enough to stay home when that sick.
I wasn't allowed to date black people darker than me.
No Harry Potter, because of all the wizards.
Now, I could understand the rule except for one thing, I was allowed to play DnD, read LotR, have friends who were literally occultists. But no Harry Potter.
My religious education teacher at school once gave us a lecture when someone brought up harry potter, on how witchcraft was actually real and it's a sin and all that. Cue a class full of 11 year olds staring at her in disbelief 😂
When I was 14 my mum banned me from taking selfies. Said they were unnecessary and self absorbed. This was in 2009 and I hated her for it, all my friends were posting cute 'camera in the bathroom mirror' pictures and I couldn't. Now I am grateful because those pictures are cringey af.
I had to chew my food 50 times before swallowing. It is harder than it sounds. Eating soup was a bastard.
My Dad would ground us if the toilet paper was put on incorrectly. He wants it to go under. Now that I'm married and in my own house it always goes over.
Did you know, and I know nobody asked, but when toilet paper was patented, it was specified that the toilet paper was supposed to go to the front of the roll, not behind.
I was told that my friends could not sleep over because they may murder me and my family. My parents have always come up with weird excuses to avoid having an honest conversation.
"Can't costs a quarter!" We weren't allowed to give up on something and say "I can't", and we'd have to put a quarter in this Snoopy bank if we did. She wanted to encourage us to look for solutions and ask for help instead of just giving up. In the long run, I think it helped because I went to school for electrical engineering and am now a web developer where I essentially do problem solving all day long.
I really don't think this is stupid. Working with kids myself, I know how they say this so often, especially girls. And instead of explaining them what self-fulfilling prophecy means, I will make them say "Looks hard, but I'll try."
My family had three valid excuses, and if one of those fit a situation, you were no longer in trouble. You still had to deal with the consequences of your actions like cleaning up a mess or whatever, but no extra punishment.
1. Dad... In my defense, you weren't supposed to find out.
Maybe my parents were supposed to be out of town until Sunday, but they came back a night early and found my friends and I shit faced and a mess everywhere. "Dad, you weren't supposed to find out. I was going to clean it all up and you'd never know." No longer in trouble.
2. Dad, in my defense... it was funny!
This one mostly covered pranking each other. No punishment, but you had to be ready for them to one-up you.
3. Dad... in my defense... there were snakes...
Self explanatory.
Okay, the first and third are good rules, the second one is a bit problematic. Not everything is funny for everyone. There are some "prank-videos" on youtube, that are supposedly funny but are borderline criminal. That would not be an excuse i would greenlight for every situation.
Maybe it's an agreed upon consensus between all involved parties? Otherwise, you are 100% correct.
Load More Replies...Rule 1: small stuff maybe, but that could real ugly real fast. "Hey dad, sorry I took your car for a joy ride and wrecked it, and then lied and said it was stolen. You weren't supposed to find out"
Really? "Dad, sorry I lied to you, snuck out the house after you told me to stay in, did flakka with my buddies all night, spent the night with an underage girl, then missed my test the next morning, failing my class...but you weren't supposed to find out!" ...so no punishment because of the "cool" rule, right?
Load More Replies...This rule is not disturbing, it’s cool. AI think in the long run it led to a better ability to stand up for what you have done. And I think that these parents knew very well that that it is firmly anchored in the "job description" of children and young people that they do nonsense from time to time or even screw things up really badly.
I can sort of understand the first one, but I don't think you should be off the hook just because a prank was 'supposed to be funny'. Funny for who? 9/10 times it is only funny for the one pulling the prank. This also leads onto people as adults. Why should they get away with damaging property, for example, because it was meant to be funny?
Funny is a relative term. The other two are legit, but that middle one is subjective.
I mean, I really think that first one covers, literally ALL situations.
I want my parents to do this for me, then I’d never get in trouble!
I concur your dad sounds awesome.. I have a python I could really work with #3.. any chance at adoption?
-Not me, but my bestfriend who is 18 years old isn't allowed to close her door (even if she is changing clothes) and if her parents catch her door closed, $5 fee. -Also $10 fee if she leaves her bedroom light on. -She's not allowed to watch Harry Potter, Twilight etc.. anything to do with magic, or evil spirts regardless if it is rated G. -Didn't attend Sunday church that morning? Grounded for a week and $5 fee
Aa the super religious nuts. A great way to make your kid move out and NEVER talk to you again
I wasn't allowed to sit on my bed. I would get into trouble if my friends sat on my bed and crumpled he sheets. They had to stay looking crisp and ironed which is near impossible.
Did you by any chance have to adrress your parents with: “Yes, sir, sergeant, sir?”
My mother has always had a white couch. Big, fluffy, inviting sectional type.
No one can sit on this couch, or even breathe near it. God forbid i forget to mention this to company coming over.
I have often wondered why the f**k its even there.
My great grandparents had a formal parlor like this, but everything was shades of avocado and lime green and it was wrapped in plastic. No kids allowed ever though
Not really weird but I was never allowed to say I was bored. If I said it too often I was made to sit down and do nothing for about an hour. I learnt pretty quick though that anything was better than sitting and doing nothing!
I can't leave the house after sneezing and I can't do anything new on Tuesdays because I was born on a Tuesday. Crazy superstitions that my mom refuses to let go.
My mum wouldn't let me use the dishwasher well into my teens in case I slipped, fell on the open dishwasher and stabbed myself on knives.
She also didn't like me getting things for myself. If I asked her where the chopping board was she'd not tell me. I'd say "just tell me and I can get it" but no, I had to wait for her to stop whatever she was doing to get it for me. It drove me nuts because if I kept asking to get it myself she's shout that I was being demanding. How is wanting to not bother you and be independent in the simplest sense demanding?
Not being allowed to cut our hair...it was down nearly to our knees (it was not religious OR cultural, just, idk). Then my mom let my younger sisters cut theirs but I still wasn't allowed. When I turned 18 and finally could, the hair stylist said I had over a foot of split ends she took off.
Our weirdest rule was the Underwear At the Table Rule. Me and my three sisters were big fans of being naked when we were younger, so from ages 3-8 whenever we'd come home from preschool or school, everything would just come straight off regardless of who was home. So my mother instituted the Underwear at the Table-rule, stating that during dinner everyone needs to be wearing underwear at the very least, otherwise no dinner.
This worked for a while and was later complemented by the rule stating that if you have chest hair, you have to wear a shirt (that one applied more to my dad than to us)
Not my family, but my best friend's family would always rinse their ice off with water before they poured their beverage in the glass to "wash off the mechanical bugs"
Mom's parents didn't let their children laugh while lying down. Whenever someone made a joke, if anyone was lying down, they had to sit up and laugh.
We couldn't eat the butter until we turned 13; only margarine.
Your family is right. Butter can impact your pitituary gland preventing it from producing growth hormones before puberty. It can also make you grow a third eye and turn you into a god /s
January was sugar free month. But December 31st was eat as much f*****g sugar as your body will allow.
We only ever had one bathroom for everyone to share. Anywhere we moved. Always one bathroom, therefore, if someone was taking forever in the bathroom and you had to use it, you would go sit on the bed of who is in the bathroom until they got out. So if you happen to pee yourself.... After a couple incidents with a 6 year old, nobody took more than 10 minutes in the restroom. Ever.
Had to recite the bill of rights verbatim before getting allowance.
If we were naughty, we had to stare down the toilet.
Worked a treat - humiliating, non-physical, and in hindsight pretty f*****g funny. My dad is a joker.
Could only have half a glass of milk at a time. I could drink that and then have another half glass. But not a full glass. I was told it was because milk is expensive and they didn't want it wasted.
We were not allowed to walk through our dining room. Nothing made my mom angrier than having footprints through her OCD vacuum lines in the carpet. It was easier to cut through dining room from the hallway to get to kitchen. Sometimes after mom was asleep, my brothers and I would sneak through. The older we got, she seemed to get crazier about it. I remember all three of us being grounded for a week for one of us walking through, since she couldn't tell who was the guilty one. It's so strange because other than this rule, and not being allowed to sit on our beds, she was lenient otherwise.
My mother was OCD about housecleaning, too. The problem was, I had to do the cleaning from a young age up until I left home. If I didn't do it to her specifications the first time, I had tho do it over until I got it right. I learned to do it right the first time. Lol
No wearing clothes that fit, everything I owned was a couple sizes too big because 'I grew so quickly.'
That's either because of being poor or your parents being scared you attract pedophile if you wear fitting clothes.
During dinner we had each had to discuss 3 things we learned that day. If you didn't have three significant things to discuss you didn't get dessert.
It trains you to talk about your day, but it would be better if they talk to you right after you come home these first 5 minutes after you see your kids after school, listen listen listen, actively listen (ask question to what they say) and you'll get the smartest kid of the school
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There should be more testing for having children than having cars. Just a thought.
My mom wanted me to look at the sun everyday in the morning for 5 minutes. Her logic was that I’d absorb the sun’s energy and become more powerful. My eyes ended up watering because the morning sun doesn’t suit me for some reason so she gave up
My mother insisted that we were poor and having 2nd hand clothes was a must (only applied to me and never my siblings) So I always had skin tight school uniforms that would leave welts under my armpits and school shoes full of holes - but she was allowed a $4,500 lounge suite. The rule was she got to buy anything and if I asked I was a b*tch. Also I was short, fat and dumpy so I wasn't allowed fashionable clothes because I didn't have the body for it.
Makes me realize how normal my parents were. I can't think of any weirdo and reasonable, they were all very reasonable. We had reasonable curfews, we could cut our hair, take regular showers but of course not super long like half an hour, eat pretty much what we want, could date any race. My brother had a black girlfriend and my parents didn't mind she was at our place and we're white.
Same here. Somehow disturbing to read these peoples’ “habits” up there.
Load More Replies...Girls can’t wear black. I wasn’t allowed to turn heat (baseboard heater) on in my bedroom. The rest of the house was heated with forced air.
not me but my friends growing up. They could not call their parents Mom or Dad. It was always Mr Smith or Ms Smith. Like " I can't come out to play right now, Mr Smith says I have to help him clean out the garage" or "Ms Smith can you sign my permission slip for the school trip tomorrow?"
My mom has strange belief - If you have a food craving, and eat thing you were craving, you gonna throw up. So as a kid, when I said I wanted some food, I wasn't allowed to eat this specific food and had to eat something else. Like every nausea must be caused by eating something you were craving.
My sister and I have often talked about what a great childhood we enjoyed---neither of our brothers are in the picture any longer, but there are two (now men) between her and me (I'm the oldest of four)---and how much fun we had so much of the time. Mom and Dad had basic rules, of course, and we had to obey them, but there weren't any weird ones like "no sitting on your bed," or any of the other ones in this post. Our parents had good, solid heads on their shoulders, and both were intelligent, reasonable, as well as artistic, people. We were all strongly encouraged to read (we had over 6,000 books in the house at any given time, as well as loads of good magazines such as Popular Mechanics, Better Homes and Gardens, so we could always have something from which to learn outside of school stuff), to go out and play---although I usually would sit under or way up in the branches of, our huge maple tree and read, read, read. I love to read! Our parents were truly good people!
(**Do you feel left out that you do not have diacritical marks in your name??:)
There should be more testing for having children than having cars. Just a thought.
My mom wanted me to look at the sun everyday in the morning for 5 minutes. Her logic was that I’d absorb the sun’s energy and become more powerful. My eyes ended up watering because the morning sun doesn’t suit me for some reason so she gave up
My mother insisted that we were poor and having 2nd hand clothes was a must (only applied to me and never my siblings) So I always had skin tight school uniforms that would leave welts under my armpits and school shoes full of holes - but she was allowed a $4,500 lounge suite. The rule was she got to buy anything and if I asked I was a b*tch. Also I was short, fat and dumpy so I wasn't allowed fashionable clothes because I didn't have the body for it.
Makes me realize how normal my parents were. I can't think of any weirdo and reasonable, they were all very reasonable. We had reasonable curfews, we could cut our hair, take regular showers but of course not super long like half an hour, eat pretty much what we want, could date any race. My brother had a black girlfriend and my parents didn't mind she was at our place and we're white.
Same here. Somehow disturbing to read these peoples’ “habits” up there.
Load More Replies...Girls can’t wear black. I wasn’t allowed to turn heat (baseboard heater) on in my bedroom. The rest of the house was heated with forced air.
not me but my friends growing up. They could not call their parents Mom or Dad. It was always Mr Smith or Ms Smith. Like " I can't come out to play right now, Mr Smith says I have to help him clean out the garage" or "Ms Smith can you sign my permission slip for the school trip tomorrow?"
My mom has strange belief - If you have a food craving, and eat thing you were craving, you gonna throw up. So as a kid, when I said I wanted some food, I wasn't allowed to eat this specific food and had to eat something else. Like every nausea must be caused by eating something you were craving.
My sister and I have often talked about what a great childhood we enjoyed---neither of our brothers are in the picture any longer, but there are two (now men) between her and me (I'm the oldest of four)---and how much fun we had so much of the time. Mom and Dad had basic rules, of course, and we had to obey them, but there weren't any weird ones like "no sitting on your bed," or any of the other ones in this post. Our parents had good, solid heads on their shoulders, and both were intelligent, reasonable, as well as artistic, people. We were all strongly encouraged to read (we had over 6,000 books in the house at any given time, as well as loads of good magazines such as Popular Mechanics, Better Homes and Gardens, so we could always have something from which to learn outside of school stuff), to go out and play---although I usually would sit under or way up in the branches of, our huge maple tree and read, read, read. I love to read! Our parents were truly good people!
(**Do you feel left out that you do not have diacritical marks in your name??:)