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User482
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Do it like Mumble Mum
Do it like Mumble Mum
Do it like Mumble Mum
When the boy was younger and sulking/kicking off etc I'd stand there stern faced and say
"No, don't laugh, no, don't do it"
He would be laughing within 5 seconds. Crisis over.
I tell them that their pout is rubbish, and I can do a much better one. Then we have a competition.When the boy was younger and sulking/kicking off etc I'd stand there stern faced and say
"No, don't laugh, no, don't do it"
He would be laughing within 5 seconds. Crisis over.
Being a superb parent, I understood that his choice of football strip would deeply effect his self confidence.
I instinctively knew that I had to step up to the mark and do the right thing by my boy.
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Oy i aint that old !As long as you get them back from her before bed time, I don't see any problems.
Having recently changed jobs, I now work shifts and can take the kids to school and pick them up some days.
My oldest lad is ten and seems to have arrived at stroppy teenager mode ahead of schedule.
On the days I take them in the car, I have found a great way to make the whole process trouble free. The family car disco. If he is kicking off, I blast really cheesy music out and me and the two little kids have a mad disco. I throw some awesome dad dancing shapes, just as his mates are making their way past our bouncing parked car.
Just the threat of this has now transformed the whole process into a trouble free experience.
Any other superb parents have novel approaches to dealing with the little angels?
Tell me about it , my lad is the same age and just the same.My lad's 10 1/2 and already in teenage mode as well, I think they just grow up quicker nowadays..
The first 30 years are the worst .My oldest lad is ten and seems to have arrived at stroppy teenager mode ahead of schedule. ...
Any other superb parents have novel approaches to dealing with the little angels?