- Joined
- Aug 25, 2011
- Messages
- 1,467
- Reaction score
- 4
I've had fishes living 15++ years. Not that hard once you know what you're doing.
15 years! Impressive!
I've had fishes living 15++ years. Not that hard once you know what you're doing.
There was something about it in the book Deaf Like Me. The parents took turns reading each others' lips and found it easy, so they assumed it must come just as easily to their daughter.
That's a crazy assumption.
Why do you think it is a crazy assumption? It makes sense that one would have to know the language and how to pronounce words before one could lipread.
VacationGuy234 said:Nice way to invalidate the OP's feelings.:roll:
If you don't understand the problem, you can't solve it. Beyond that, if you only want to give people nice answers you're not helping anyone.
The daughters refusal is unreasonable, but not getting the hearing test is unreasonable too. So, if you side with the OP the daughter is not going to learn ASL and that is not what she wants. You can't solve anyone's problem like that because it involves compromise.
The OP wants an answer to her question: What should she do that is going to solve her problem?
they assumed it must come just as easily to their daughter
The mother should not have to "prove" anything to her daughter. The daughter is the child and the OP is the parent, who is providing the child's financial support.
When my older son was 13, he had the crap beaten out of him by a group of neighborhood hoodlums - in our front yard. I was in the kitchen and didn't hear him screaming for me. This lasted about ten minutes and then he was able to fight his way to the door and get inside. I felt like the worst mother in the world. That being said, I would never allow my guilt over incidents like that to make me a doormat.
Wirelessly posted (dorothybaez)
I am so sorry that your daughter was so mean to you! Especially in front of her boyfriend. I am going to preface my comment with telling you that my kids are ages 21 & 17. So I'm not just talking out my ass...
If my child said something so cruel, disrepectful, and just plain ugly to me - he would be rewarded at minimum with threats of being cut off financially. I'm too damn old to spend my money to get treated like crap.
I can't imagine ever being so mean to anyone, let alone my mother!
Wirelessly posted (dorothybaez)
I never knew that book was part of a trilogy. I'll have to read the other two...
As for "talking back," I was never a "because I said so" mom. The few times I needed instant obedience because of some danger, I just quickly said so and they did what I told them. It was always important to me that my children would develop their own moral compasses....I think they have.
What bothered me most about the OP's situation is that her daughter was just being gratuitously cruel, and that kind of behavior just sends me into orbit.
Every parent makes mistakes, and we all have shortcomings. Families are supposed to make allowances. Sometimes it's hard, especially when a parent's weaknesses or disabilities (not trying to use those words in a negative way) may get in the way.
When my older son was 13, he had the crap beaten out of him by a group of neighborhood hoodlums - in our front yard. I was in the kitchen and didn't hear him screaming for me. This lasted about ten minutes and then he was able to fight his way to the door and get inside. I felt like the worst mother in the world. That being said, I would never allow my guilt over incidents like that to make me a doormat.
I agree. It's like saying "if only I could teleport..."
Not an option... shouldn't feel bad for something you cannot control!
Why do you think it is a crazy assumption? It makes sense that one would have to know the language and how to pronounce words before one could lipread.