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RE:The Sullivan Family #63 To stop Zoe being any meaner, Erin’s left home with Benjamina Ballerina!
... them when they had a toddler but did nothing about it..., all for the camera, the trampoline at lossie with multiple kids ...
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tattle.life |
OneMagnum |
Jun 26, 2026 |
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RE:When to transition to toddler bed
.... Next to it is his toddler “floor bed” which he loves... uses it as a gymnastics trampoline to launch himself onto the...
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community.babycenter.com |
LB00GIE24 |
Jun 25, 2026 |
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RE:r/relationships: Damn you, Penis! This is all your fault!
... husband usually takes our toddler outside daily and after ... than my toddler (around ages 7-11). We have a trampoline, a little...it’s good for our toddler to socialize and that these...was outside with my toddler on our trampoline and he let them ... off. Now my toddler starts crying because he wants to be on the trampoline and doesn’t understand why... playing with my toddler, they’re just taking advantage of ...
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forums.somethingawful.com |
Troublemaker |
Jun 24, 2026 |
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RE:Room sharing help!!!
... 3yo. They are both in toddler beds since my oldest had ... and use it as a trampoline. It could be that they ...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
FroggerBlue |
Jun 23, 2026 |
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RE:Climbing out of crib
... floor bed or a toddler bed. My 18mo is in a toddler bed since he turned... trampoline at night... The transition went smoothly for us, but if you are afraid of your toddler...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
FroggerBlue |
Jun 23, 2026 |
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Re: One Month One World One Year Challenge 2026
Shizu9no1 wrote: Did you replace Meida Naranja with your toddler park? Yes Shizu9no1 wrote: Do the other toddlers use Pandasama's toddleer toys autonomously? Melody did with the rocking horse and the trampoline. But she was the only one.
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forums.ea.com |
GlazeyLady |
Jun 15, 2026 |
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Exhausted
... mostly I know he's a toddler toddlers are very. I don't... the emergency room on the trampoline, banged his ear so hard ...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
Michelle301978 |
Jun 10, 2026 |
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RE:Reclaiming rent from landlord
... was like walking on a trampoline with the amount of movement ..., and my 20 month old toddler can easily fit between them. ...
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forums.moneysavingexpert.com |
meme86 |
Jun 6, 2026 |
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RE:Rough boys/toddlers
... bag, but also maybe a toddler trampoline. My son is autistic and... by jumping on his little trampoline (it has a handle so...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
pinkbury |
Jun 3, 2026 |
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RE:How are we managing stress and decompressing
... & babies. There’s also toddler specific hours at trampoline parks. (trampoliniums?, it’s... a week for toddlers and toddler specific classes. I know your... when my oldest started having toddler tantrum. When the kids aren’t...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
slm1st |
May 29, 2026 |
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RE:Toy rotation
..., hot wheels, a slide, small trampoline, big donut stack rings, scarves..., pikler climbing set , a portable toddler book shelf, activitiy cube, &...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
MartyParty4 |
May 28, 2026 |
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RE:Charlotte Louise Taylor #49 Loser in her luteal phase
... pricks) with 2 kids (one toddler, and one Bill's age) and... and a trip to the trampoline park - and that's all ...
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tattle.life |
frikandelbroodje |
May 23, 2026 |
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RE:birthday presents that are great for different ages
... our play kitchen because my toddler uses all the wooden food... -Rock climb wall -Indoor kids trampoline Neither of my kids have...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
junebaby2522 |
May 17, 2026 |
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RE:I am struggling.
... I will play with my toddler, whether its his cars, Matching... potato (he jumps on his trampoline and tosses me a ball ...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
Aspentreesinthefall |
May 15, 2026 |
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RE:activities for 12 month old
..., some of the local trampoline parks have toddler times for pretty cheap...
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community.whattoexpect.com |
KristynC97 |
May 12, 2026 |
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RE:Amazon Australia: Sellers/Reps Post Your Deals Here
... Toddler Trampolines for Kids Trampoline Max Load 150KG Rebounder Mini Trampoline, Indoor/Outdoor Trampoline... MERACH mini trampoline for kids rebounder trampoline for adults kids trampoline rebounder trampoline toddler trampoline engineered... Protection - MERACH indoor trampoline rebounder trampoline toddler trampoline rebounder trampoline for adults exclusive 3-layer...
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www.ozbargain.com.au |
loveumurphy3 |
May 9, 2026 |
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Trampoline for Kids with Enclosure, SHINPT Toddler Trampoline for Kids, Upgrade Full Anti-Rust Tampoline for Backyard, 55" Kids Indoor Trampoline with Safety Net, Small Trampolines for Boys & Girls - Walmart.com
submitted by /u/Apprehensive-Top-909 to r/RecognizedReviewer [link] [comments]
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r/RecognizedReviewer |
Apprehensive-Top-909 |
Jul 7, 2026 |
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15% OFF BCAN BT1 36'' Toddler Trampoline, ASTM Certified-Foldable Mini Trampolines for Kids Ages 1-6
submitted by /u/Special-Style-3305 to r/dealsonamazon [link] [comments]
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r/dealsonamazon |
Special-Style-3305 |
Jun 8, 2026 |
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TIL Toddlers can use the trampoline!
here is my lil toddler just jumping on a trampoline!! submitted by /u/missmiming to r/Sims3 [link] [comments]
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r/Sims3 |
missmiming |
May 21, 2026 |
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For the love of god, GET OFF YOUR PHONE... I'm talking about parents...
Anyone else annoyed by this? Ok, so my daughter and I do a gymnastics class together. 1-4 yrs old, it's a parent and tot class. My daughter loves it, we work hard together. We listen to the coach, no short cuts, try all the moves. Lots of great lessons here. The other kids, just fool around, don't listen, cut in line, follow way to closely... I mean, my kid is on the bar and another kid will go right behind her and kick her in the back. It's not the kids fault. It's the parents who have their heads buried in their phones not giving a crap about what their kid is doing. At one point, I looked around at all the other parents with their kids and they were all on their phone. Like WHAT? at this point just have your kid do a class without you! I just can't understand this generation. I'm an older mom (44) and maybe I just have no care to be on my phone while I'm actively in a class with my toddler. I'm just venting because I pay good money for this class and these parents just don't care! Also, what are you showing your child? You can see it in the children already.. lashing out, not listening, tantrum fits all over the place. All the while, my daughter just wants her chance to jump on the trampoline. I'm so annoyed!! It's become the minority these days when I see parents playing and being present with this toddler... the majority of parents I see are mostly on their phone. This makes me so sad;-( submitted by /u/ariesonfire123 to r/toddlers [link] [comments]
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r/toddlers |
ariesonfire123 |
Apr 9, 2026 |
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Toddlers On Trampolines
please excuse my lag. new computer and still figuring out settings. I've been playing the Sims for 15 years and had no idea toddlers could do this!! I learn something new everyday!! submitted by /u/DaPurpleGazelle to r/Sims3 [link] [comments]
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r/Sims3 |
DaPurpleGazelle |
Apr 5, 2026 |
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Everyone warned me about the bad, but no one told me about the good
I have a toddler boy who turned 2 in early January, and currently pregnant with my second. Now, don’t get me wrong, this kid gives me a run for my money. I have bruises all over my legs from him jumping on them like a trampoline. He bites, hard. Giving him a diaper change is like trying to wrangle a yard lizard. Oh, and eating out? Forget it. There is a screaming, throwing himself on the floor tantrum multiple times a day. Everyone always said “terrible 2’s”, watch out for them, “oh you just wait”. BUT Did no one bother to tell me that all of that is nothing in comparison to the most beautiful parts? When they randomly stop what they are doing to give you a kiss and a hug. When you are rolling on the floor laughing at their goofy behavior. The silly way they run (2 year olds are fast). The way they look at you like you hang the moon and the stars. The way they melt into you when you are rocking them in your arms before bed. How they sit in your lap when you read. How they get extremely excited to show you the smallest things. Their laugh. When my husband and I are up at 11PM laughing at something he did. Watching them learn the world around them. Having kids is one of the hardest things I think anyone can do, just an opinion. But, when they say it’s worth it? My god is it so fucking worth it. I thank God everyday that he chose me to be his mom because I couldn’t imagine living my life without him in it. That’s all. submitted by /u/SilentMood6333 to r/toddlers [link] [comments]
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r/toddlers |
SilentMood6333 |
Mar 29, 2026 |
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This made me laugh too much.
How many of these are you? submitted by /u/Buckarooney1 to r/GreatBritishMemes [link] [comments]
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r/GreatBritishMemes |
Buckarooney1 |
Mar 10, 2026 |
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Talk to me about toddlers and trampolines
Hi all. I’m an ortho PA with a rambunctious 3 year old toddler. I have always been against taking my child to a trampoline park until they’re a bit older due to the risk of lower limb fractures. We were recently invited to a birthday party by someone close to us and they’re challenging my boundary by saying I’m overprotective. I know the evidence speaks for itself, and I know about the recommendations by the pediatric and orthopaedic societies of America and Canada alike. I know everyone will have their opinion on whether or not the risk profile is beyond their comfort level. I’m struggling with this decision due to the tension it is causing in this social situation. I want to hear educated opinions and subjective experiences with this sort of thing. Thanks in advance for taking the time. submitted by /u/BruiseLikeAPeachTree to r/orthopaedics [link] [comments]
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r/orthopaedics |
BruiseLikeAPeachTree |
Dec 23, 2025 |
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WIBTAH if i left Christmas dinner because my MIL got our toddler a trampoline?
We have communicated to my MiL multiple times that we do not think it is safe for our 3 year old to have a trampoline. We also don’t have the space for one (even a mini one) inside or outside. Our older boy (now 15) had one at her house when he was 5 and it was great for getting his energy out. 3 is not 5. We also have another baby on the way. We have told her point blank many times we don’t think it’s a good idea. But it keeps coming up. We’ve said no to one being outside. No to one that lives at her house and she brings over with her. No to one we store in the shed or the garage. Just no thank you. Prior to it coming up again today my last words on the matter were “if you bring a trampoline into this house it will be on marketplace before you leave”. It’s at a point where I’m worried we’ll show up to her place on Christmas Day and there will be one there. WIBTH if, upon seeing it, I just got up and left, came back for my husband and the kids hours later? I wouldn’t dare try to pack up the kids or force my husband to leave but I’m not sure I could stay. I’m already so mad I’ve had to repeat this boundary so many times. submitted by /u/AstralStray23 to r/AITAH [link] [comments]
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r/AITAH |
AstralStray23 |
Dec 22, 2025 |
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Trampoline parks in SA that are toddler friendly.
I had to cancel my membership with Airtopia because they got rid of the awesome toddler area that they had that my kids absolutely loved and replaced it with a VR experience and laser tag activity. It was also so convenient because I live really close to it so I'm so bummed about it. Are there any trampoline parks in SA with toddler and baby friendly areas to play??? submitted by /u/spammusubisa to r/sanantonio [link] [comments]
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r/sanantonio |
spammusubisa |
Dec 10, 2025 |
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$28.98 (Reg. $65) SONGMICS Trampoline for Kids, 3ft Mini Trampoline with Handlebar, Toddler Trampoline for Indoor and Outdoor, Max. Load 220 lb
submitted by /u/Star_bum to r/RunandBuy [link] [comments]
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r/RunandBuy |
Star_bum |
Nov 20, 2025 |
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[World] - China toddler, 3, chokes to death while drinking bubble milk tea on trampoline | South China Morning Post
submitted by /u/AutoNewspaperAdmin to r/AutoNewspaper [link] [comments]
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r/AutoNewspaper |
AutoNewspaperAdmin |
Nov 3, 2025 |
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"Toddler" area at local trampoline park has a drop slide
We love this indoor amusement place, but holy hell do they not know what a toddler is. That slide is maybe 15 ft high and the first 6-8 ft is almost completely vertical. That step to get on it is also only like 6 inches you can literally crawl over the edge. The 10 year old toddlers love it though! submitted by /u/Mindmenot to r/daddit [link] [comments]
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r/daddit |
Mindmenot |
Jul 14, 2025 |
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Trampolines are my new nightmare. Two adjoining neighbors have trampolines and kids are rubber, but sometimes the “double bounce” sends a toddler flying into something.
. submitted by /u/SpritzLike to r/rant [link] [comments]
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r/rant |
SpritzLike |
Jun 18, 2025 |
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Ungraded the feet on my toddlers trampoline to protect my floor
Thin, hard plastic feet replaced with thick bouncy 30% infill 95A TPU ball feet. submitted by /u/hello-its-G to r/functionalprint [link] [comments]
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r/functionalprint |
hello-its-G |
Nov 15, 2024 |
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My[29F] husband[33M] is an overgrown child and I think I've reached my breaking point
I am not The OOP, OOP is u/FrustratedWifeTW My[29F] husband[33M] is an overgrown child and I think I've reached my breaking point TRIGGER WARNING: destruction of property Original Post Dec 18, 2015 I'm sorry if this is jumbled or formatted weird. Our most recent fight just happened and I'm still upset + I've never posted something this big using Alien Blue. We've been married for 4 years, together for 7. We have two kids; Daughter[4F] and Son[2M] I'm really not sure where to start. My husband is an overgrown child, he just doesn't know when it's time to be serious. This is the only problem in our marriage. He's extremely loving, affectionate, and kind. He LOVES being a dad. He loves our children more than anything and they love him as well. He is constantly playing with them, and I think this is where issues start to arise. My husband cannot understand when it's time to put playtime on pause. I'm serious when I say he's in playtime mode with our children from the moment they wake up, to the moment they go to sleep. This results in extremely hyperactive children in the morning when I'm trying to get our daughter ready for kindergarden, and it's extremely frustrating to have to struggle to get her fed/cleaned/dressed and out the door on time for school - where he then will drive her too. At night, this results in hyperactive children who can take up to two hours to get to settle down and go to bed, and by then it's way past their bedtime and will sometimes wake up grumpy in the morning because they didn't get enough sleep. He will sometimes even be egging our children on at night when we're sitting with them in bed trying to wind then down to sleep. It's incredibly infuriating and I will tell him to stop because I'm clearly trying to get them to sleep and all he's doing is keeping them up. He laughs and says he's just having fun. Husband doesn't do hard discipline. He tells our kids to stop fighting each other or to stop touching fragile objects, but when it comes to time outs or taking away things like dessert, certain toys, TV time for the day, ect; he all but refuses. He will leave me to be the "bad guy" and I'm absolutely sick of it. I'm tired of feeling like I'm the mean mom who doesn't like fun or has to ruin their fun, but he just won't do it. I've told him that he needs to stop leaving all the hard discipline up to me, says he will, but then leaves it all up to me again next time. I dread when the kids are older and things like grounding become a thing. My husband is constantly breaking our children's toys because HE wants to play with them. He's broken a little kid trampoline we got for them because he wanted to jump and play on it with them. He's broken 2 (our daughter AND sons) of those toddler sized motorized cars by sitting on them and riding around with them. Like, I would look out the window and see him riding around on these things having the time of his life, meanwhile our kids are standing on the edge of the yard watching him and waiting for their turn. He's broken a little kid basketball hoop by pretending to be on a pro basketball team and doing dunks, which bend and break the actual hoop. Our daughters birthday was last month, and one of our friends bought her a little scooter. My husband broke it within a week because he wouldn't stop playing and doing tricks on it every time he stepped outside the house for something. Our daughter was devastated because she loved that thing, even more so because she loves our friend who gave it to her, so to her it was extra special. I also feel terrible that this toy my friend spent her money in was destroyed by my husband before my daughter barely got any play time on it. Now, my husband is 6 foot and about 20lbs overweight. He has absolutely no business playing on these children's toys, and I've told him time and time again to stop playing on them because they aren't made for a person his size, and that he will break them! And then he does! And he'll sheepishly carry the broken toy in to me and say "sorry", but then he's back at it again destroying another toy shortly after. We got our daughter a bike for Christmas so she can start learning, and I don't even want to give it to her because I know he'll ruin it for her like he always does with their toys. These are just some of the bigger broken toy examples. There are also countless smaller things of theirs he's broken; like balls, dolls, little cars, a doll house, a slide, ect. He's always making our kids play with him, even when they clearly don't want to or just want to chill out/relax and sit and watch a movie. This mostly applies to our son, who is much more introverted/sensitive than our daughter and usually prefers calm and quiet interaction over the loud and hyperactive playtime my husband always does. A handful of times he has frustrated/overwhelmed our son by continuously pushing Son to play with him, resulting in Son to start to cry because he just wants to be left alone! Now finally on to what prompted me to post here. My husband is always telling our kids, and everyone else that our kids are his "best friends". Since our daughter started learning to talk, he's trained her to answer the question "who's your best friend?" with "daddy!". Our son is in early talking stages and he is starting to train him do this as well. At first I didn't see any issues with this, and actually thought it was cute. But our daughter has made a really good friend[5F, I'll call her Emily] at school this year. Daughter is always talking about Emily and asking if Emily can come over/Daughter can go to Emilys house. Today my husband asked our daughter "who's your best friend?" And our daughter paused for a moment, got a huge grin on her face and said "Emily!" And it looked like my husband had just been given the worst news of his entire life. He asked her "what?" And our daughter started giggling and said "Emily!" again and my husband said "no no, who's your BEST friend?" And again, still giggling, she says "Emily!" my husbands face went blank and immediately removed himself from her and went into the other room. Our daughter seemed a little confused, but mostly undisturbed and went back to watching cartoons. I followed him and asked him what was wrong and when he starts talking I realize he's beginning to cry! He tells me that he's "supposed to be" our daughters best friend and that he can't believe she would "toss him aside" like that. Now up until now, like I said, I thought this best friend thing was cute. I never realized exactly how serious my husband took this, if I had I would have tried to put a stop to it early on (but then again, how exactly can you tell your husband to stop calling his kids his best friends?) Anyway, I was a bit shocked at this point and I admit I didn't use as much tact in my response as I probably could have, and ask him if he's serious. He says "of course I am" and I tell him that he's the parent. He's not SUPPOSED to be a best friend to his kids. He's supposed to be the parent. And that he's 29 years older than our daughter, of course she's going to eventually make friends her own age and start considering them her best friends. He tells me I "don't understand" and I told him he was being ridiculous and childish. He looks at me as if I just slapped him and tells me I'm being heartless and accuses me of not wanting him to have a good relationship with our kids and leaves the house early to go to work. I have no idea what to do. I almost feel ridiculous, because how can someone have an issue with their husband loving their kids?! I feel insane, and I haven't been able to talk to any friends about this because I feel like they'll all be "so you're mad at your husband for playing with your kids...? What's wrong with you?" But I just don't know what to do anymore. I don't know how to address these issues with my husband in a way he'll understand so he'll start being reasonable about them. I also feel extremely anxious about everything now, because my husband and I have been trying for the last two months to conceive another baby, and now I don't want to bring another child into the world without having this mess sorted out. But I know telling my husband I want to wait on this 3rd child will devastate him. TL;DR: Is it possible to love your children TOO much? Because I think my husband might, and I have no how to get him to grow up and stop acting like a 3rd child, and start asking like a parent EDIT: Since it's being asked a few times, I'm just going to put this here instead of typing the same comment over and over. My husbands relationship with his parents growing up was, in his words, great. He has 3 siblings (all successful adults) and his parents interaction with our kids now give no indication that they are the reason my husband doesn't seem able to grasp parenting himself Update Jan 12, 2016 (1 month later) Edit: Whoops, forgot to link the OP! A few things first, I just wanna thank everyone who commented on my OP. I got overwhelmed with the amount of responses while on mobile (had no computer when I posted), and stopped replying, but I read every single comment and story. I've received a few PMs asking for an update and I'm sorry it's so late! This update would be extremely long if I typed every single detail (and still is kinda long, whoops), so I'm gonna try and condense it. So, I sat my husband down the night he got home from work after posting my OP and we had a loooong talk. Again, this would be incredibly long if I wrote all the details so I'm gonna summarize and go in the order of my points I made in my OP. Keep in mind, our talk didn't follow the order of my post, so I'm sorry if anything seems confusing, since it would have been discussed out of order: On not knowing when to pause playtime - I told him that I know he loves playing with the kids, and I love that he loves playing with the kids, but that I really need him to work with me during bedtime. I also once again pointed out that their lack of sleep is making them grumpy and harder to manage in the mornings, and that they're growing and need their sleep. He's had a couple slip-ups since, but he's cooled it down around bedtime now and makes more of an effort to help me with bedtime. He's started reading to them instead (I used to to it) and is 20 times better than me at it because they love the funny voices he gives the characters. On discipline - I told him its not fair of him to constantly make me feel like the bad guy. And that no parent LIKES disciplining their kids, but they need it to learn and grow into good adults, and that I need him to be united with me on punishments. He's having a little trouble with this one, but has been trying more. Which I appreciate. On breaking their toys - I, again, told him that I know he loves playing with our kids, but he needs to stop destroying their things. That not only is it upsetting them, but it's causing us to needlessly spending extra money to replace things that we don't need to be. I took this part of the talk to suggest we finally get a full sized trampoline like we had been talking about for a little while, and that he should dig out his bike from the garage so he can ride with our daughter when she learns. We're both probably more excited about the trampoline than the kids lol. We talked more about this topic, but these are the most relevant points. He realized he goes a little too far after I described the scene I wrote about in my OP, with him riding around on their little cars while the kids are standing on the sidelines. I'm also happy to report he has stayed off our daughters new bike. On making the kids play when they don't want to - He agreed that it wasn't cool of him to push just because HE wants to play. I told him our kids are people, and just because they're kids, doesn't mean they don't deserve to have their boundaries respected or time to themselves. And now on to the best friend thing - This was the first thing we discussed. Long story short, he was feeling hurt and generally having a little trouble accepting our daughter was growing up. This is really the first big thing shes done or said to show that she is, in fact, growing up. And he just wasn't expecting it and handling it very poorly, which he knew he did. I took a line from a comment on my OP and told him our children will have lots of best friends in their lifetime, but he will always be their only dad. This visibly comforted him, so thank you to whoever it was who wrote that. I took a suggestion from someone on the OP, and suggested that he call up his own parents and ask them for advice on how they handed watching 4 kids grow up and leave the nest. He really liked this idea and has since done so. I also showed him stories commenters on my OP shared about their relationship with their parents growing up. I told him that I'm not showing him them because I think he's going to become like those parents, but that I think it's important he see the children's side of things. These stories hit him pretty hard, which led into this: So, I left something out of my OP that I didn't realize was relevant. Lots of people asked how my husbands relationship with his parents was growing up, and I answered that it was great. However, my own relationship with my parents was horrible. Long story short, I don't get along with nor even like my parents, and I see/talk to them maybe once a year. Growing up was miserable, to say the least. And it affected me for quite a long time where I was a huge ball of anger and resentment because of the way my parents treated me. I told my husband about all of this a few months after we started dating, so he was aware of everything from the start. My husband told me he told himself he would be the best dad he could be, because he wanted our kids to have the childhood he knew I wanted, and wanted for them. Now, I started crying here and was a bit of a mess for a few minutes lol. It was honestly one of the most touching things anyone has ever said to me. I told him he is the best dad, and that I love him so much for it. Finding out that this was essentially the root of everything, it was a lot easier to continue on with the rest of my points. Everything has been great since. He really listened to what I was saying this time, and has made a big effort to help me out more while also cooling it a bit with the kids. Him and our daughter have been riding around on their bikes together every weekend. I've also started learning how to ride so I can eventually join. Again, I wanna thank everyone for commenting on my OP and helping me gather my thoughts. I thought a few things said about my husband were a bit extreme, but I realize that's something that happens when people give advice on a situation they only have so much info on. tl;dr: Talked to husband. He's great. Made me cry. All is well. THIS IS A REPOST SUB - I AM NOT THE OOP DO NOT CONTACT THE OOP's OR COMMENT ON LINKED POSTS, REMEMBER - RULE 7 submitted by /u/Direct-Caterpillar77 to r/BestofRedditorUpdates [link] [comments]
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r/BestofRedditorUpdates |
Direct-Caterpillar77 |
Oct 6, 2024 |
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Inflatable owner jailed over death of toddler thrown 40 feet after beach trampoline exploded
submitted by /u/Sandstorm400 to r/awfuleverything [link] [comments]
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r/awfuleverything |
Sandstorm400 |
Jun 6, 2024 |
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Trampoline parks are awful for toddlers
Long story short. Took my son to a trampoline park today. There were a bunch of kids his age and a bunch of teenagers. Son (4) fell and tried to get up and a 12 year old double jumped him and fractured his femur. I’m devistated beyond words. He’s in a splint now and have pediatric orthopedist set up in hopefully soon. Never again. submitted by /u/atooraya to r/Parenting [link] [comments]
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r/Parenting |
atooraya |
Feb 20, 2024 |
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should even the Toddler trampolines be avoided?
Father in law brings to our place something like this.... https://www.amazon.com/Galt-Toys-Nursery-Trampoline-Kids/dp/B00IT2JOTY I know regular trampolines should be avoided, both due to safety and bone development issues. What about the mini versions? submitted by /u/Levante2022 to r/ScienceBasedParenting [link] [comments]
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r/ScienceBasedParenting |
Levante2022 |
Sep 22, 2023 |
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AIW for yelling at an autistic child
I was out having with my 2 y/o daughter at a kids event. We were building a wall with plastic blocks. A boy who looked 8-10 years old came up and tried to knock the wall down. I reached out to protect the wall and politely asked him to stop. He ignored me and tried to knock it down again. I asked him (again politely) to stop and looked around for parents. There were none and he continued to ignore me and try to knock down the wall that my toddler and I were building. I didn't see anything recognizable in his behavior except b***head behavior. After two more times of telling him to stop and no parents in sight, I got irritated enough to raise my volume and say "STOP!" He immediately walked away. Two minutes later, a woman is in my face chewing me out for yelling at her special needs child. Apparently he was autistic, which is why he ignored and didn't respond. I asked if he had difficulty socializing, why wasn't she with him because I would never let my 2 y/o in a situation that she couldn't handle. She called me an animal and continued screaming at me. My family and friends say that I'm NTA because she shouldn't have left her son alone or expected people to know he was autistic and needed extra patience. But I wanted to get some strangers' opinions. EDIT: I did not expect this to blow up like this. I posted this here because I know two things about myself that makes me second-guess myself a lot. First, I am naturally an impatient person and it's something that I am constantly aware of and fighting against. Second, I grew up in an abusive childhood and just got out of an equally abusive marriage. I have been officially diagnosed with PTSD related to intense negative energy, especially hostile and aggressive energy. And that makes regulating myself difficult in these kinds of situations. I know because of these that my behavior is rarely perfect and I tend to obsess over triggering events. I didn't know here where I fell on the right to wrong scale and wanted unbiased opinions. I can comfirm with confidence that all I said after asking him nicely to stop was one, loud stop. I have read all the comments and I appreciate the feedback. I don't think it will be a surprise to many of you, considering your thoughts on the other mother, that after she got done screaming at me, which did put me in full fight or flight mode, she brought her son back to the wall and kept pushing him to "do whatever you want, Harrison." When he just walked away again, she settled him in the corner to play with a balloon. And while he was playing there, I could see distinctly autistic mental and physical behaviors. I just hadn't seen them before. I've dealt with autistic children before and when I know they're autistic, it makes a difference how I interact with them. I used to work at a trampoline place and parents regularly brought low functioning autistic children in to jump. One time, it was a 6 y/o boy and his parents had been told that they needed to be with him at all times (standard procedure), but at one point, he was alone on the big court, where all the older teen boys and boys in their 20s like to jump, which makes it the more dangerous area. He wasn't following safety rules and kept lying down. I was afraid he would get landed or jumped on because they couldn't see him. When he didn't follow my instructions for safety and I couldn't find his parents on or off the court, I took his hand and gently (knowing he was autistic) led him off. His parents complained to the assistant manager and she got me fired for "laying my hands on a customer" claiming that I "dragged" him off the court. Dragging was far from accurate, but I lost the job anyway. submitted by /u/Thin-Comparison-2721 to r/amiwrong [link] [comments]
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r/amiwrong |
Thin-Comparison-2721 |
Jun 8, 2023 |
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Dog enjoys trampoline time with toddler..
submitted by /u/LegitimatePhrase1391 to r/aww [link] [comments]
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r/aww |
LegitimatePhrase1391 |
Jun 20, 2021 |
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Toddlers bouncing on a new Christmas trampoline, AKA FullShrimp generator
submitted by /u/sabertooth66 to r/FullShrimp [link] [comments]
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r/FullShrimp |
sabertooth66 |
Jan 11, 2020 |