Honey You're Ruining Our Kid - S2 Ep3 Are Some Kids Just Brats? Hair Pulling, Eye Rolling & More
Episode Date: September 18, 2023Are some little kids just trying to wind their parents up? Jar and Tina delve into this and three other great questions anonymously supplied by you, the listeners of Honey! You're Ruining Our Kid! (Th...e zero judgement parenting podcast) Question 1: An uncle worried about how rude his brother's kids are. Can step in or has he any role in breaking this behaviour? Question 2: What to do about Trichotillomania? This is a disorder that can get out of control if your child is using is as a comforting technique. Question 3: What do you do when siblings have a very strange relationship? How do you get your kids to believe in each other?Proudly sponsored by Buymie. Email- honeyyouareruiningourkid@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram for even more https://instagram.com/honeyyouareruiningourkid?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==Get bonus episodes and support the show www.patreon.com/irishmanabroad
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Honey, You're Ruining Our Kid with Jarleth and Tina.
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Honey, You're Ruining Our Kid, the parenting podcast from an Irish man abroad.
It's all about helping you with this challenge of raising kids.
I am a stand-up comedian and Tina is a child development expert
with more than 20 years of experience in the business.
There's actually zero judgment here and everyone does it their own way.
At the end of the day, you have to do what suits your family.
And I'm just here to try and help them.
You got to come down to the level and give them a chance you gotta give them a warning and say that is not okay what you did here's what's gonna happen yeah it sounds a lot like our relation
jar if you do that again there's gonna be no basketball for the rest of the week it's honey
you're ruining our kid the parenting podcast from the Irish Man Abroad Podcast Network.
Tina, I'm going to come straight out the gate.
I'm coming in hot today.
I get so nervous.
I just want to know, like,
do some kids just,
are some kids just acting the bollocks?
You know, you're trying to figure out
what are they doing?
Why are they doing this?
What can we do to help them?
But some of them are just being little bollocks
is that is that am i am i losing my mind you mean like are some of them playing their parents
yeah yeah of course that's the whole thing they're playing their parents and that's why
i'm here to help those parents find the strength to not be played don't get played by your kid so
when you're in the classroom for example in that
setting and you recognize oh this kid does there's nothing wrong here there's no yeah there's no
issue you mean when a parent thinks there's an issue with their kid and there's actually it's
just actually acting the maggot yeah or worse yeah that when we get to this later where it's like the
parent is not helping matters oh well well they're playing they're buying it
hook line and sinker yeah and you're looking at them going no your kid's fine i think they're just
playing you i think that that is a problem that's coming from this idea of um consciously parenting
which is a beautiful philosophy on parenting and you know being kind and you know never losing it with your kid always
being the resourceful kind well being the calm little center yeah but people have got that a
little bit wrong like there's never been um a time when people have encouraged conscious parenting
and then also encouraged no boundaries no rules and just let your kid do whatever they want because for me
what i always stress oops it's okay is safety is actually what you should be driving for does your
child feel safe and how do you get to those feelings of safety your child needs to know
exactly the rules in the house mom's boundaries dad's boundaries then you've got a happier kid
you can i absolutely advocate
conscious parenting i think it's beautiful that's where it gets tricky though isn't it because
you're like i want my child to feel safe so i'm gonna tell them now this is happening then this
is happening which is your now and next thing which like we need to get a patent on because
it's just so it's it's helped so many people but what i'm saying is it gets tricky because you're like you don't need to
involve your kid in that yeah you're telling your kid we're going to have this for dinner it's like
now they think they're a stakeholder in the choices like dinner's dinner eat it it's a really
hard one to balance the seesaw of that yeah because like that's why i find it hard to give
advice from emails i really it really is so much more helpful for me to be able to see the child
because then i see how people are interacting with the child too and whether the child's a
bollock yes of course charlotte knows that the more of a little bollocks that child is the more
i'm going to love them because i love the
little spirited ones i do i love it because it's never their fault i'm not a fan you're not a fan
yeah i know what you mean it's never their fault it's never their fault and they're so easy to put
back on track yeah i mean you're right there's too many parents maybe i can't start with a definite. There is too many. No, yeah. Look, we're seeing it all the time.
And people know themselves.
I'm just giving them too much.
Yeah, we do it.
We do it all the time.
And then we go through phases where we're trying to pull it back.
Here's the other thing.
To bring it back into the bigger context of world news.
The two big stories this week.
Sophie Turner, Joe Jonas breaking up they're not
this is not the biggest news by the way i i recognize that's not the top of the news i've
been so dragged into this um romance yeah oh well this is like this is a real insight into spin
doctoring and how exactly how much people are buying spin anymore. And Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden,
has been indicted on gun charges.
Now, he is a problem child.
And the impression I get with Joe Biden,
even though that's a man, like that's a grown man,
who's got a gun charge, what the hell has that got to do with his dad?
But we know there was trauma in his childhood.
Massive trauma in the family.
And I would imagine that Joe, being away as much as he was
found it very hard to say no to a young hunter and that's parent guilt mom guilt dad guilt yeah
exactly huge problems too some of that comes into what we're talking about here where you had a
pretty shy childhood yourself and you didn't feel like your man ever gave two hoots about you. Yes. That parents can then be like, well, then I'm not going to have my child sad ever.
And that is what I mean about the boundaries and the feeling of safety.
Because your child will not be happy in themselves.
They just won't if they don't feel safe.
So you can be the yes mom and the yes dad all you want and get them whatever they want
but that child who has no sense of boundaries will not feel secure and safe in themselves
and i'm not saying like rules i'm just like boundaries if you tell them clarity if you
say they can't have something your child should happily respect your voice and know well my mom said that that's
it that's how it works that's how it works and that's a kind of safety feeling for them also
telling them my job is to keep you safe if they if for a reason they can't do something it's good
it's a good thing to say to your child you're telling them i love you i want to keep you safe
but um tina's job is to answer your emails keep them coming in honey you
are ruining our kid at gmail.com by me are our partner make sure to download the app let's get
straight to question number one hello Jaren Tina I absolutely adore your show. I don't have a parenting question per se.
I have an uncle dilemma.
Oh, okay.
Problem with another parent.
Okay.
So this is the uncle or?
I don't know.
My brother is raising some rude kids.
It's driving me crazy.
Himself and his wife model rude and exclusionary behavior.
Oh, wow.
I've had no idea what to do, but their kids don't say thank you.
They seem really entitled.
It was cute when they were small,
and they just seemed like little cutie pies with a little bit of attitude.
But now they're getting bigger,
and my patience for their lack of manners is wearing thin how can i change their behavior can i change
their behavior as an uncle do i have a voice what is your advice i'm ready to explode at my brother i don't understand how he doesn't see how rude
his kids are any help would be much appreciated there's a very tricky one right that's very tough
and i say right off the top that we're in some dangeroso territory because you have to say if go in front of him you are being rude yeah like oh god the lava could shoot from all the orifices
yeah like if somebody said that about my kid in front of me i don't know actually i'd be like well
if he was rude yeah no we're definitely the parents who're like do you think mikey was rude
mikey were you rude yeah we call them out and all that i just heard you didn't i heard in the other room you're not
saying thanks no we definitely go a bit probably a bit too much this is a scary one because if you
whatever advice you give if he follows it and they fall out yeah could fall yeah it could ruin the relationship so the question is in a nutshell
yeah
as a
relative
do I have
any
influence
over
my
siblings
children
sadly no
no
and that is the answer
there's no
you can want to
but you risk
falling out
definitely
100%
definitely
and maybe and I love all my nieces and nephews it needs to be said yeah me too my god we adore them they're the best You can want to, but you risk falling out. Definitely. 100%. Definitely. And maybe.
And I love all my nieces and nephews, it needs to be said.
Yeah, me too.
My God, we adore them.
They're the best.
But maybe the trick is you do need to get in there early.
We've all been there.
Yeah.
Where you're like, oh, do I say that now?
I'm looking after them for the day.
Oh, if they're in my care, I absolutely will.
Yeah.
Tell them that's rude. Don't do that. An instance care, I absolutely will. Yeah, I definitely remember an instance
and we won't, we don't even need to name names.
Where a relative of ours, a niece or nephew.
I am so afraid.
This is scary, right?
I can feel, I can totally feel why this email came in.
I, yeah, I'm tensing up.
And we went out for lunch and they ordered two main courses.
They were like seven.
There were seven at the time.
We were like, no, you got to pick one or the other.
Yeah.
And they were like, I want to get hot dog and pizza.
And you're like, that's not how it works.
To be fair, when I explained that if they were still hungry after, of course, we'd order more food.
But we wouldn't have.
No.
You know, I would never let anyone go hungry.
Of course, if you want two main courses, just eat one.
They couldn't get through the first one at all.
No, they couldn't finish it.
Yeah.
But it was, look, it was a good lesson in that.
Yeah, I thought they took it very well.
But, you know, yeah.
Can you parent your brother or sister's kids
no you can't right well if you're minding them yeah then they're in your care this person has
probably listened to this going well that's not what i'm asking what i'm actually saying is
if my kid is punking me well i think about it yeah the kid is like snatching it from your hand
yeah when you go here's a little bag of crisps for you there oh and i snatch it from your hand yeah when you go here's a little bag of crisps for you there
oh and they snatch it from your hand walk from the room are you not entitled to go what do we say
oh absolutely or come in take the bag of crisps empty them into the bin and go well if you'd said
thanks that wouldn't happen no i do think of course that's not really parenting though that's
just daily manners that's just you're allowed to say things like think of course that's not really parenting though that's just
daily manners that's just you're allowed to say things like that that's more the question here
i think yeah if you give a child something if i give a child a present and they snatch it and
don't say thank you i will and have done go to the child and say you need to say you're shaking
your head i have watched you not do it as well. Really? I've definitely watched you not do that.
Then I'm afraid of the mom.
But yeah, well, like we've been at kids parties where it's happened.
Yeah.
And, you know, this is a very tricky question.
Yeah, I used to hear from more aunties and uncles because I just don't think you can get involved.
No.
I think you got to.
It's one of those things you've got to grin and bear.
Yeah, unfortunately, because if it's being modeled, then the parents are OK with it.
That's the, but so, but then what your advice has always been, Tina, is to do model yourself, right?
Just focus on modeling for yourself.
So let that kid see that if you want the best from me, you do this.
Yeah, I think that's's okay and if they're
in your house they have to abide your rules like if they're over if they're staying overnight you
know if they're rude you can say i really don't like that in our house that's not something we do
i'd like it when you're here i don't know how it works in your house keep saying i know it's crazy up there Up there Up in that
Up in this bitch
Yeah no I really feel bad
Because I got nothing really
Because I feel like you get involved
Well like you
You are going to
You're in a minefield
Yeah
And like Tina
These are always the hardest ones
These are always the hardest questions
And we love
getting difficult questions from you guys but always the trickiest ones are where family
tensions occur where it's like remember we had that person where the mom wouldn't let her you
know discipline her kids and this is a very common thing that you can't discipline your
kids in front of your mom yeah and our advice for that you're being too tough on that advice
really worked for that mom she started taking her child out of the room out of the room and that is
good but you can't do that with your nieces and nephews that's overstepping that is overstepping
it's hard not to overstep because you love them so much you love your nieces and nephews so what's
the first thing they do let's get this clear you model it yourself yeah you model when they're in
your house these are the rules i think if behavior takes part it takes place in front of you to you
you are within your rights to say i don't like how you're talking to me i don't like how you're
behaving in front of your brother if the child does it to you yeah i would always i'd do that i would do that because it's you they're affecting
with their behavior my brother but you can't he doesn't have kids yeah he doesn't have kids
i think you can't if you witness if you're observing behavior you can't get involved
but if it's happening to you yeah you can get involved in that right but you can't ever say anything to your brother because they'll just take offense
yeah and the other big uh provision that needs to come with this advice is that we don't know
what your relationship is with this sibling or whoever this is in your family if you're listening
to this going yeah i'm gonna do that we don't know and also you gotta remember as the uncle you're not there all the time you don't know how hard it is to raise
these kids yeah i really really don't like ever judging another parent ever no matter how bad
unless they're hurting their child then i will be like fuck that but because you just don't know
what day they've lived already or what's gone
down and you know like like they say you know those memes where the mom is holding the kid
like a rugby ball which i'm all for yeah and they're like stop judging that mom she asked
nicely twice i love that because i'm like yeah you have no clue what happened before that you
don't know how many times you got down to that child's level and tried to be nice at a certain point as a parent you have to be able to go that's it your rugby
ball we're out of here you know best look in ireland in the rugby world let's look to that uncle
before we go on to question two we did leave out one thing in question
one that probably needs its own section and that is the
exclusionary behavior that got mentioned there's a mention of it in there yeah exclusionary behavior
i certainly had cousins that enjoyed a little bit of don't tell him leave him out you know
i hate that's right and for them it was jokes. Like it was, it was like, leave him standing there and he thinks there's nobody here.
I witnessed Darlett reminding one of his cousins this summer.
Of a trick they played on me.
And like she didn't remember.
Was appalled.
She was appalled at her behaviour, but had no memory of it.
Whereas this is a core memory for Darlett.
Core memory, yeah.
That he carries around.
Do you want to know what that is, guys?
Will I tell you guys what happened?
So I think I was about six, right?
And yeah, I would have been no older than six
because I was definitely home from school before everybody else, right?
Because I was the youngest member of the family.
In case you can't tell, a lot of comedians are the youngest member of their family.
So craving attention, home from school early,
chowing down, watching a little bit of Bosco,
the glory years.
Bosco was great.
Uprock, the nesters from Cork to the Regan house.
And you're like, well, I've never met these cousins really.
They're not first cousins.
They're second cousins, right?
So they show up in the summertime.
You might see them, but they're so much older than me
like they're like they seemed like absolute adults yeah they're probably like fully like
the girls look like women the men had mustaches we all look the same age now yeah but like
they were like go on outside now and play and i went to run outside and my mother said put on your coat it's so the
way it's amazing i can remember every yeah it really looked on your coat and i came back in
my coat unbelievable nobody else put on their coats this is why i relate to kids so much all
these memories are so vivid throw on the coat go out the back garden nobody's out there nobody's there i've
heard this story maybe a million times so what the did they not come out i'm like but they walked
out the door ahead of me i'm six years old and then they all jumped from trees and rooftops and
shed tops and frightened the living shit maybe the most scared i've ever been at any
moment in my life and i rocked my core like that kind of kind of scare me sunk in and uh
i remember feeling so betrayed right that like i was like that wasn't mean that was like the
egg cracking on the head why you do that
yeah
why would you do that
I was like obviously crying
well and you had a little bit
of a temper
didn't you break tennis rackets
and stuff at that age
that's a whole
another episode Tina
but I brought it up
with this woman
yeah I was there
I was like
oh here we go
a full 30 odd years later
and she was appalled by what she'd done but it was that kind
of mean uh stuff that this person talked about in question one where it's like you're not only
these kids rude but they're practicing exclusionary behavior and we're living in a time when it's more
possible to exclude people than ever before yeah as our communication methods mean that you can just mute them hide them
block them it's terrifying to me also don't add them that stuff happens by accident on social
media too which is causing you're saying that tina but you're excluding people never but i have seen
i saw a whole thing um yesterday on twitter uh it was actually your friend, David Frayn, who did that lovely interview saying,
I'm not seeing the replies to my Twitter.
And then somebody got in touch to say, well, you must have muted or blocked people.
And he goes, I've never done that to anyone.
And he hadn't.
And then a lot of other people were like.
Elon Musk did it for him.
Maybe.
Do you think so?
Yeah.
So it seems to be happening. But yeah, I get what you mean. We've seen it. We've seen exclusionary behavior. and then a lot of other people were like elon musk did it for him maybe do you think so yeah so it
seems to be happening but yeah i get what you mean we've seen it we've seen exclusionary behavior
what do you do and to be honest the gross thing that i've seen is it's parent-led that's all i've
seen it's not the kids it's from what i've seen it's parents telling their kids to stuff that
doesn't sit or just show
or just showing them yeah this is what we do we don't because uh so i'm i'm coaching basketball
at the moment right i'm back coaching basketball mikey's team mikey's team right and it's just
funny that i like i i think you have to nip it in the bud early and i think the parents need to be
talking about exclusionary behavior um i just saw
a bit of uh kind of trash talk going on from the sidelines to one kid who was smaller than the other
kids and you know i stopped the practice and said that's good coaching that's not how this team
works nobody belittles anyone good on the team yeah if you're going to shout
something from the sideline it's positive that's that all of these players are helping each other
up but like i was my heart was beating so fast because i just felt so bad for the little guy
yeah the little guy i think what you did was right because children need guidance and when that's my
that's the scary thing I'm seeing.
What I'm seeing is it's parent-led.
So then I find myself going, hang on.
This is kids you're talking about. You're talking about kids.
So the dialogue.
I think the dialogue, from what I'm seeing,
in my experience, is parent-led.
And I can't stop myself in those moments.
And do you mean like when parents are around going,
oh, well, that kid's a little bollocks.
Yeah.
And we started this show with me calling kids bollockses.
But like if you're a parent who is speaking a bit too freely in front of your kids about, oh, well, that kid's an absolute arse.
But like what hope does your child have?
It's going in.
You're saying to your kid that this kid's a bollocks and he'll never change
whereas that little kid is in a state of groat and change they're not who they're gonna be they're
not how dare you i hate when people limit kids i hate it yeah i'm like yeah okay i can see that
kid has a few problems yeah but you've no idea what their story is and also when they don't
what their potential is yeah and they also when they don't recognize a you yourself yeah we're a little bullock side at the end of the day you're talking
about kids stop parents need to stop talking about kids in a weird way because you are you are
green lighting it for your kids to behave you cannot but in this instance exclusionary behavior
i don't blame it on kids ever i look to the parents and i think what are you saying what are you what does this parent do if he's seeing it happening if the uncle
he can do fuck all in this instance nothing i don't see what he can do i just don't only when
it's like i said in terms of the manners if he's there and it's happening in front of him then get
guide them like you did at the coaching right well yeah not a whole load of answers in answer one here but sometimes i don't have
the answer yeah well that's true you need to state that definitely have the answer to question two
okay
tina and jarlet I absolutely love your podcast.
Apologies if this has been covered before,
but I'm still making my way through the older episodes.
Absolutely no apology necessary.
Did you know that you can get longer episodes and bonus episodes
over on patreon.com forward slash Irishmanabroad?
Yeah, there you go.
My three and a half year old little boy started hair twirling
about three months ago, solely at bedtime. So that's the thing literally just like burrowing
your finger and twisting a hair around it. Okay. He used to fall asleep nursing, holding onto my
hair and often would still find a lot of comfort holding onto and twirling the end of my hair,
reading books and having a cuddle. So it made sense he began doing it to himself to soothe when
he made the switch from me putting him to bed every night to Dada putting him to bed. Okay,
here we go. He recently started Montessori and he's loving it. Ran in happy as Larry on day one. However, the hair twirling has turned into hair pulling
and he has an ever-growing bald spot.
Oh no, we don't ever scold him for it,
but try redirecting him and give him something else to engage his hands.
But it's getting worse.
Couple all that with potty training at the beginning of the summer
and a baby sister Jew in a few weeks.
There's been a lot of big changes for this guy.
He's a very outgoing, chatty, happy boy who outwardly takes it all in his stride.
But it's obviously internalizing all of these changes.
Very tough.
Is a buzz cut the answer?
What can I do to help him?
A buzz cut is an option. It's actually not a bad option, the buzz cut the answer what can i do to help him a buzz cut is an option it's actually not a bad
option the buzz cut but i think this child like it's all gonna be okay i hope i feel like this
mom another incredible mom who is redirecting his hand how clever is that just trying to knowing
that this unconscious behavior and that i need to
redirect it before it becomes a habit forming behavior uh it's so tricky because you know this
is a this is a what do you call it um he's got a bald spot i know but it's a it's an issue what
it's called when you have like a disorder that is a disorder it has a special name
uh i cannot remember but i i was guilty of
it myself for a while you did this i used to pull out bits of my hair it is a self-soothing thing
that people do and uh i remember reading about colin farrell of all people saying that he was
struggling with this disorder that when he was stressed out he realized he was pulling bits of
his hair and he was getting a bald patch and i was like oh shit i do that too so for ages i used to have to sit on my hands
and i want to do it what age were you uh 30 wow so there is a possibility that if they don't get
on top of this that this can go on into adult life yeah well it's a very common it's like one
in three people do this but it's not that common for little guys oh and what she's
noticed is true he's using it as a self-suiting technique so we need to think of other things
that maybe he needs i feel like straight off the bat he needs a hair sensory head sensory program
he needs like massage when she's washing his hair he needs his hair brushed because he's gotten used to some kind
of stimuli in that part of his skull that he's enjoying and that needs to be replaced with a
different activity i also think she's right about the redirection how do you redirect it though
maybe at night time he gets a teddy that's really fluffy and fuzzy or a doll with hair and if he needs to do it he'll do it to the doll or
the teddy and not himself do you say it well actually that depends on the kid i think at
three and a half you could have a chat with him depending on the kid you could sit him down and
say you i don't know if you know you're doing this but you sometimes you're actually pulling
out your hair and when mommy's now going to need you
to try and stop and when you feel yourself going to do that i want you to put your hand under your
bottom and sit on it or i want you to hold your hands i want you to stretch out your hands do
something else that isn't pulling out your hair i mean if this mom feels he's old enough for that
chat i would go for it but if he's not redirection is is important here
i think this is a very tricky one because obviously you you'd need to meet the kid you'd
need to meet somebody do they need to enlist the help of somebody for this well i mean it's a tricky
one because kids do all kinds of strange things they go they just kind of they kind of fall through what are the strangest ones you've seen give us some examples of kinds of strange things. They just kind of fall through early.
What are the strangest ones you've seen?
Give us some examples of kids doing strange things.
I definitely had some odd habits myself.
Well, sucking.
Kids can suck on their limbs.
You know, the sucking is a big one.
Remember that kid?
Yeah, and also sucking on the arm.
Kids can do pinching under their arms like really sore punching that they they start
these all become comforting behaviors that's what you don't you need to break the pattern
now i know with this with older children and maybe it would work with younger children you can get
gloves and it's just putting the gloves on is enough for when they go to do the unconscious
behavior it feels different
and they stop themselves or you can put plasters on the top of their fingers and again when they
go to pull their hair it doesn't feel as nice because it's not their fingertips it's plasters
on their fingertips and they're not getting the same extreme end of this yeah well he is balding
so that is extreme but uh it will pass it's's just doing, getting it right, getting the,
I do think some kind of sensory program for his hair,
a sensory diet for, you know, scalp massage.
Where would they find that?
Well, they don't need to find it.
It's just making time for it.
So like I would say, if you do bath time at night time,
just massage his head while you're washing it.
Afterwards, brush his hair nicely, you know,
give him that stimulus he needs on his
head that's comforting to him so he doesn't go searching for it somewhere else yeah so enlisting
the school this is something you always talk about do you do that here i don't know i'm not sure
because he's only just started and he's very happy but maybe going to the doctor wouldn't be the
worst thing because maybe even the doctor telling him to stop could work.
You know, the temptation just to go with the buzz cut must be massive because that was the first
like she suggested it.
Like, yeah, I don't think I even noticed that bit when I read that email about the buzz cut.
I think I was just like, so, oh, God, this woman needs help.
But like, it's not a terrible option but it could make it
completely worse it's not solving it no it could be very traumatizing for him to yeah he might just
redirect that behavior so i think i think the teddy at nighttime could work he just wants to
feel the pulling of something i mean it will this is not unusual no well it is unusual for a three
year old to do that.
A small person, yeah.
Normally, it's teenagers or older people who kind of get into this bad habit of pulling their hair out of their head.
And I remember I used to pull it and curl it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm just interested just to, when we're winding up this question, that for other parents outside of this particular parent, kid isn't balding but is twirling
their hair and you've seen them yoink hair from their head yeah what's the answer well that's what
i was gonna say like it's all good and well me giving her techniques how to deal with this
behavior but there's something underneath it that she needs to look for. There is a worry. There's somewhere he's not feeling easy or safe.
That's what I'm saying.
And that is really hard.
And that's where you can go to the Montessori
and you can encourage group time
and give them questions you want to ask.
Because as I always say,
there is no better time being a Montessori teacher
than circle time and news time oh my god you
will hear everything stuff that comes I was telling Darla's sister the other day I love to be in that
classroom now with her little gorgeous girl in there because I would be just asking her everything
because that's what that little girl's going in and telling the whole life yeah they
so that is lovely like it is lovely it's their news it's a very safe place
for them yeah and actually you know what um this week i saw this it's too young it's too old i mean
for this kid but if you have a kid a little bit older who you're worried about and maybe there's
lots of stuff on their mind and they're not great at sharing this week i found a really amazing
journal uh well-being journals and it's kind of leading questions and oh my god
it's so good i can't believe it it's working really well for us and i really recommend it
there's a well-being junior journal that i got and it's it just i realized that with my child
i don't know about anyone else's he was finding it really difficult to just
divulge into his journal so now these little questions and prompts have really really helped
it's called the head plan kids journal gratitude journal for kids that encourage happiness and
well-being from ages 6 to 12 it is expensive a little bit old for this particular emailer it's 20 pounds sterling
yeah but you can find it on amazon and i'm sure it is expensive but oh my goodness i feel like it
really is working but but you could adapt even if that mom went on to the amazon and had a look
you could adapt your own kind of journal for his age group which is smiley faces or emotion faces
something where he can feel like
he can um communicate to you yeah how he's actually feeling inside
this is a strange one but i think my four-year-old daughter thinks my six-year-old son
is a hopeless case my four-year-old seems to think her older brother can't do anything for himself.
She is either in a state of constant helping him or constant eye-rolling at him.
I didn't notice until he went back to school and now my daughter spends her time saying mean things about her brother.
Betty forgets his books today, Mom.
Oh my God.
Betty doesn't remember to drink his water when he comes home.
I can just picture this kid with the arms folded going,
hey, that was an absolute nightmare.
Yeah.
Now I am aware of it, and I have a little old soul on my hands,
but I'm worried as to why she thinks her brother is such a waste of
space. Her brother can be clumsy and forgetful but he's also kind and very funny. I've noticed
he enjoys her taking care of him. I've seen her get his shoes firm and make sure he has brushed his teeth how do i get her to believe in him more wow i've
never had a question like that before no it's really interesting and very very very very cute
and i think the same advice goes here as i gave with those to those lovely moms with their
husbands you gotta start bigging up your child you gotta start saying nice things about your kid
both kids to each other and around the house so you're referencing the question we had a couple
of weeks ago where the mom couldn't get the kids to hang out with the dad yeah so she started
saying isn't that the best yeah hanging out with dad's so much fun and then all of a sudden they're
like yeah we're gonna hang out with dad's so much fun. And then all of a sudden they're like, yeah, we're going to hang out with dad. Yeah.
And suddenly, like literally, game change.
Yeah.
So I want to throw this into the mix.
You think that by saying your little brother Tommy is brilliant.
Listen to your little good man.
Have you noticed how good he is?
He's getting good at remembering his own stuff.
I'm going to throw this in.
I'm going to throw this in.
Is it possible that she is treating him like a dolly and is just enjoying the being,
has seen moms being like,
oh my God, can you believe it?
Because we'll have to forget the shoes.
And she's trying to bond with her mom over,
we're both moms, we're just living our lives yeah yeah you have a
point definitely is that possible i actually i have a point oh shit we should have a klaxon
i don't think that will stop it i mean if she encourages it like you know it's only going to
get worse and you know i'm not saying encourage it right i'm not saying that but like sometimes
i think these little madams and i'm not saying you're i mean that in the best possible way
yeah who want to go for baby chinos with their mom and just be grown-up women already i know
they're so amazing like i want one i really want one they're so amazing i'm always so envious of
the mom who's like hanging out shopping with her
tiny little mini me yeah so my answer is is that maybe she doesn't actually think this but she's
just trying to you know be like you and be like on it taking care of him helping out yeah fair
enough but she still you still can't allow her to talk like that about her brother and you're not
saying you're correct she's identified the mean. And I'm not saying you correct.
She's identified the mean things.
Yeah, I don't think you correct the speech.
You just model better things.
You say nice things like, I heard he's doing great at school.
I heard he can do this for himself now.
Did you notice your brother put on his own shoes this morning?
He's very good at putting on his own shoes.
And encourage the boy to be more independent.
Why is he expecting his sister?
I mean, that's not going to, that's not going to pave out well for him, pan out well for him.
Because then he's going to expect more girls in his life to just keep doing shit for him.
We all know those men.
Yeah, girls don't want to do that.
Or shouldn't have to.
Shouldn't have to, they don't want to.
It's a funny one because the question is, how do I get her to believe in her brother more?
Actually, I think, how do we get the boy to be more independent?
Yeah. I think that that boy needs to be...
Yeah, he's not going, give me my shoes.
Don't you try and put my shoes on for me.
I know how to put on my own shoes.
We need to get that boy to have more in her drive.
And maybe that just means they need a few little jobs in the house.
These are her jobs and these are his jobs.
And he does his jobs and she does hers so give them more of a sense of identity of themselves and not just
her worrying about him all the time it can't be much crack for her worrying about her brother all
the time even if it is cute and play like you think it might be but also i'd ask about him at
school i'd be interested to know is he independent is he independent or does he
have someone else doing this from there or does he have someone else i mean we've all we all know
those kids and we all know those men who are like sure i don't know how to load a dishwasher at all
at all oh i'll just mess it up you do it yeah and we all know the women like the little girl who
even if you do load the dishwasher they reload it after you walk away from
it yeah we all know those men i was like how long is this gonna go on and sometimes those women
are a little bit tough on those men
you were on to me so fast these um these episodes are so much fun to record and I'm just so happy that you guys are still enjoying them
wherever you are in the world
you can contact the show really easily
honeyyouareruiningourkid at gmail.com
if there's anything you just want us to talk about
if there's a topic you think hasn't been covered
and you'd rather not divulge your situation
yeah that's true
most people don't have their questions on the show.
Of course.
My big news is that I've added a fourth night at the Three Olympia Theatre.
I am on tour with my stand-up.
Honey, you're ruining our kid.
With Charlotte Santina.
All of them are sold out.
So there's one more added on the 18th of January.
The only way to get done is to deliver to your door in as little as an hour. So exciting. Don't forget. I was just thinking though. added on the 18th January I get very anxious when I say it out loud
it's so exciting
I was just thinking
though
isn't it so sad
that this is
the show's
for 10 euro
off your first order
you know
yeah
I am working on that
when did you do
this show called
Notions
this was up two years ago
yeah that's a while ago
yeah this would have
been a great name
for this show
yeah
it's the most
Notions-y theatre
in the country
it's my favourite it's my favourite
I'm so excited
I'm also going to be hitting the road
I'm going all around Ireland
and the UK
well not yet America
but we're working on the visa
if you want to come and see me live
next week I will be in the
INEC in Killarney
there's a few tickets left there then the next week I'll be in the INEC in Killarney, there's a few tickets left there
then the next week I'll be in Nace
Limerick, Bristol
London, New Ross
Ulster Hall, Belfast
Roscommon, Carlow
and into
the Olympia as I said
the 18th, 19th, 20th
and 21st of January
absolutely love you, Tina thanks so much for this huge episode.
Absolutely brilliant.
I love making the show, Tina.
So much fun.
I love our listeners.
They're the coolest.
I am a piece in the Sunday Business Post.
This yesterday would be yesterday,
which is about working with your wife.
What is it like to work with your wife on a daily basis?
The night of working with your wife what is it like to work with your wife on a daily basis the night of working
with your wife
oh no
nah
you know the article
is very complimentary
thank you guys so much
make sure to download
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relax the cats
honey you're ruining our kid with Jarla Santina but it's Honey 10. Honey 10. 10% is not bad. It's a 10er off. Come on lads. Relax the cats.
Honey,
you're ruining our kid with Jarleth and Tina.
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