Dear bittles,
I had reached the stage of finally calling the shots for what they were. I know the prevailing wisdom is to spare the kids the bad mouthing emotion brings, but I had given up on trying to distort reality so he could appear normal. Needless to say, she was hurt
Sparing kids bad emotion vs. distorting reality is a no-brainer for me. Anytime reality is distorted, kids know. Kids know better than adults when people are putting on a false front and they get confused. Example (from some book or other):
Mum and Dad are arguing. Mum is crying, Dad is shouting.
Child sees this and says “what’s happening? What’s wrong?”
Parents tell child “nothing’s wrong!”
Mum might go over to kiddie and hug them saying “it’s alright dear, everything’s fine, mum and dad were just talking” (as she sniffs back her tears).
The child knows they’re lying and that something is really wrong and they get confused. Are they arguing about me? Is it my fault? Why won’t they tell me the truth? (And finally, I must be a bad person. It must be my fault.)
This is why telling kids the truth – or at least as close to the truth as is appropriate – is important. How about:
“We don’t agree about something and I’m upset. We’ll talk about it some more when we both feel better. I’m sorry we were shouting, did it upset you?” Then get the child to voice their fear and we can reassure them that it’s not their fault etc.
Sorry a bit off track there (and a bit of me talking as a kid) but I wanted to say that
staying as close to reality as you can, with your children (no matter how old they are)
is the most important thing. Denying emotions is really confusing to children! You were doing the right thing bittles. You can’t apply some parenting ideas (spare the children the bad emotion) to a marriage which is not normal, okay? (((bittles))) portia