[blparent] Arguing and Talking Back

Peggy pshald at neb.rr.com
Sun Mar 11 14:45:39 UTC 2012


I always sent my daughter into her room ... I would tell her that I wasn't 
talking to her until the good Tirsa could come out and talk to me ... Of 
course I'm very good at ignoring my children until they can talk to me in a 
reasonable manner, always drove my daughter, and now my two boys, crazy.



-----Original Message----- 
From: Veronica Smith
Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2012 5:04 PM
To: 'Blind Parents Mailing List'
Subject: Re: [blparent] Arguing and Talking Back

I'll be waiting for the answers as well, as I usually just end up yelling.
I to thought I was a patient mom, but as my husband said, not with my
daughter. Ha ha,  so most of the time now, I'll just say, get rid of the
attitude. V

-----Original Message-----
From: blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Jo Elizabeth Pinto
Sent: Thursday, March 08, 2012 9:08 AM
To: NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List
Subject: [blparent] Arguing and Talking Back

Hi, all.  I'm interested in how you moms with older kids got through the
arguing and talking back stuff, and what you did to get it under control.
Sarah hit four years old last week, and I swear, it seems like I have a
different child starting from her birthday on.  I know some of it must be
the excitement of the birthday party, and there were some issues with her
worrying about whether I was really her mom or not after that teacher's aide
questioned her at school.  But once the backtalk started, man, it just took
off like a wildfire.

I know the basics.  Stay firm and consistent.  Don't give in, and try not to
make everything into an argument.  I get that.  But what do you do when the
child just keeps pushing your buttons, and pushing and pushing, till you
want to explode?  I consider myself a pretty patient mom, and one who
doesn't lose her temper easily.  But I have to confess that I've resorted to
yelling a couple of times in the last week--I didn't like that, so I stopped
and apologized to my daughter because I can't be upset with her if I'm
acting like a four-year-old, too--and I ended up in tears once because she
just wouldn't lay off.  She didn't like the tears and immediately went into
comforter mode, but I don't want her to feel that she has to take care of
her mom because her mom can't get a grip on her emotions.  Part of it is
that I have fibromyalgia and I get tired.  Sarah's dad has had to work a lot
of hours, so I've gotten some help from members of my family I can trust.
They come in to spend time with Sarah a few hours a week so I can have a
break, and one of them will be taking her to a class on Thursday afternoons.

Sorry so long, but I guess I'm wondering if there are any tips to stopping
the arguing and backtalk before the situation degenerates into a shouting
match or a crying jag.  Thanks.
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