15 answers

Why Do We Become Angry When Someone Says Something About Our Kids

Ok here we go; we all know very well that our children are not perfect. But when another parent very nicely brings out that your child, for example is a bully, that lies, that is making someone else feels uncomfortable, making comments... and by the way this child nevers gets caught at school when he does something wrong?? I for example always ask my child about school, not only what others might be doing to him BUT as well if he has done something else to another classmate. I had instances in where I know he has done something innapropiate and I make him apoloigze, and he gets punished at home after all i know my child and i know what he can do. So why do you think we can't take a comment when we are told about it? I had parents approched me about one of my kids and I don't get upset or defensive i asked my child what happened and the best thing for us as parents is to deal with it at home afterwards, but we try to avoid confrontation. Now if something is getting out of hand then we get the school involved. Sometimes we think that if we talk to the mother in a nice way mother to mother.. thinks can get better but usually the other mother will sream and yelled that that is not the case. Children act one way home and another in school, so why we can learn to be nice about it?
And i am only talking about boys, the girls topic is too long and at times painfulas a mom to deal with it.

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So What Happened?™

Hi Moms, first I want to be clear that the question I posted was not about me or my family. As a matter of fact the reason I posted this issue it's because I was listening to a Mom friend of mine telling me the story with her son. With the exception of one of the responses ( that felt was so defensive and accusatory) all of you had something in common; most of you agreed that the behavior of the children was a reflection of the parenting skills of a mom / family. I just want to say thank you for taking the time , every day we learned something new

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You seem to know that your kids have issues already which you are addressing as needed. I think you get angry because you are doing your best which isn't good enough in another mom's eyes. When the other mom brings up issues you fight back because you think she thinks you are a terrible mom.

I think you need to step back and put yourself in the other mom's position. Is her child being bullied by yours? Did you child lie about something that was important to hers? She isn't going to see how you are coping with your child since all she's interested in is her kid's well being.

1 mom found this helpful

This is easy. As mothers and Fathers, we are our childrens ONLY advocates. So....some of us jump at defending our kids when they feel they always get the raw deal. And some of us, tend to listen first. Does not make us bad parents either way. We are just doing our jobs the best way we know how. Even if it isnt the way you would do it.

N.
it's simple, because you can't say something bad about my kids :)
i can say something about my kids, but you can't. i know my kids inside and out, all the faults and gold that they have. i don't need someone else to tell me something about my kids unless my kids have done something to your kids. that's it. and if someone says something about my kids, i'll call them inappropriate to their face and hope they never say anything again. i have had one instance from a family member saying 'poor their future husbands.' i thought it was inappropriate, hurtful and have never forgiven her for saying that.

Thank you for your wonderful post..

I tend to think a child misbehaving becomes a reflection of their parenting. "I'm doing the best I can do, so not my child"....the first reaction is defensive...second reaction is to defend the child...when in fact they are really defending themselves.....
Excepting the complaint, listening, questioning and dealing with it properly becomes another problem to deal with in an already heavy schedule. In most cases when they finally get the child home, the child experiences the parents frustation instead of being questioned, and corrected on what he/she probably had done wrong in the first place.
It's takes a healthy self esteem and self confidence to realize the complaint isn't an attack on their parenting.

IT'S CALLED PRIDE!!!! and we all suffer from it some worse than others. It is embarrasing to be told of the bad our child had done. I speak from experience!! I have a strong willed, sometimes troublesome child in 2nd grade. She can be a dream OR a nightmare depending on the moment. I have to be careful to listen and then ask her (and others) the truth without jumping her case right away. I think we get more defensive if the parent it comes from has a trouble child and won't hear it but dishes it out! I had a person who thought their child "would never do that!" when I told her something I witnessed and then she replied "well, do you know what your kid did?" all with attitude!!!! I was ready to KILL her!!! I didn't doublt my kid had done "that" but she was not willing to admit her kid was wrong.

Our kids are our "pride and joy" so to speak and when they are being accused right or wrong it gets our defenses up. I try to say "Ok I will take care of it when we get home" and leave it at that. (Then I get to it at home!) Also if I need to speak to a parent about a problem I go IN PRIVATE and say something like "I just want you to know what happened (fill in when and where) between your child and mine." Then fill in the details without anger. Most of the time 1 child is not completely at fault (sometimes they are). Then if there were consequenses to your child from you tell them that to so you are accepting your child was not shameless and has had some type of consequenses for misbehavior.

We as parents know our kids aren't perfect we just don't want others to know because they may think that WE ARE NOT PERFECT! Us looking bad is also a HUGE part of the defense that rises!

Good luck dealing with problems in the future to all parents out there! Lets try to handle to problem the way we would want it to be handled if WE were the other side !!!!! A.

Hi Natalie,
I think we love our kids sooo much and with all our hearts believe that we are raising little angels. When an outsider says something negative we want to rip their heads off. I think that's a natural response. I also think that one parent wouldn't approach another without cause (unless you know that they're completely nuts), and think we need to hear them out calmly. As kids get older they learn to fib. Whenever I ask my son why he got in trouble he either shrugs or says the teacher or whoever else hates him and he did nothing. It's all natural and we were the same way growing up. I think talking to your kids is great, but you'll never really know what happened. All you can do is teach them between right and wrong and pray it helps them in life. However, if someone accuses a child of being a bully I would take that more seriously and deal with them appropriately. Additionally, there may be a better way to approaching a mother of a child. More friendly rather than accusatory. Adults should be able to talk to each other, especiacially when it regards their children without acting like children. If that doesn't work, try talking to the teacher or counselor at the school.

K.

Hi Natalia,
As parents we love our children sooo much sometimes this can lead to denial about their behavior even when we have seen it for ourself. Not only, as humans, we sometimes have difficulty recognizing problems and flaws within ourselves. It seems you have accepted your kids as not being perfect and are aware of their flaws and wish to correct them the best that you can, but other parents often, cannot accept it and won't.
I had a mother in the past year accuse my daughter of doing some nasty things to her daughter. As the situation unfolded, it became apparent that her daughter was doing the nasty things and not just to my daughter, but to others as well. The mother could not accept it and pinned the blame on my daughter instead. There are a psychological terms for it called displacement or even scapegoating, but not everyone learns about it. I think better put, "the truth hurts."

oh yeah! this is tough. Especially in a small cmmunity
I think it is...because we see criticism of our children as a direct criticism of ourselves, our parenting, our family, our philosophy, even our religion.
You are right. Kids have many faces. Different environments bring out different aspects of any person. And kids are experimenting with who they are to themselves and to others all the time.
When I really need to tell another parent something about their own child, I try hard to frame my concern in a positive. I try hard to praise first and raise my concern second. I know it is hard.
And if I get a comment, I take it in and refelect before I speak. I think what we often miss in this exchange is patience. Assume the other parent is trying to make things right. Assume they know what is going on and have done theor best, first. I find that really helps.

And still tensions arise...

But the more we talk about it and consider how to talk to one another, the better we can get at commmunicating.
-M.

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