Others have given him props for not ACTUALLY breaking the phone
No... What I said was that there is a difference between being so angry you
wanted to break the phone in half, and actually being so angry that you do.
***
Every single parent that I’ve ever know has gotten to the point with their kids where they don’t
want to be dealing with the problems that the TV / Phone / Computer are causing, and would rather smash the sucker than deal with one more whining fit about how their kids don’t wanna turn it off to do XYZ, or one more tantrum, or one more... Nope! That’s it! It’s GONE. Gone forever. I’m
done.
^^^ That? Snort. Totally normal in Parenting-Land. Because applying limits and rules of behavior is
hard. It’s exhausting. And you reach your limit on it not just once, but many times over. And that’s durn near
everyone.
What’s rare? Is to actually destroy or sell the device. In a fit of rage or totally calmly. Neither of which happened here.
Kids grounded, or device grounded, on the other hand? Super common. And, no. Kids are NOT happy about their toy being taken away from them for the rest of the day, week, or month because they’ve misused the privilege. They will cry. They will throw themselves to the floor and scream that they hate you. They will slam doors. They will threaten to report you for cruelty (go ahead kiddo, call and say you’ve lost cell phone privileges for the week. Lemme know what they say about that. NOT 911, this is not an emergency and you don’t want to keep someone who needs help from getting help. Call the actual child protection agency if you think I’m actually being abusive instead of just saying mean things to try and hurt me.). They will throw temper tantrums that get them into even more trouble. (Keep it up, and it’s all electronics for the week, not just the phone. // Slam that door one more time and you lose the door. People have doors who can respect them.) They will be convinced that their girlfriend will dump them, they’ll become social pariahs at school, everyone will hate them, and their life is oooooooooover. (Teenagers, right now, in my house. Hormones. So much fun.) Even though, dang kiddo, didn’t Marcus lose his phone last month? Did any of that happen with him? So why do you think.... NVM. Phone is gone for the week. End of discussion. (And then they will get creative and sneak their friends phones at school and set up chats online, and it’s all good. And they think we don’t know, but we do. Ah kids ;)).
In short? They’re being normal kids, pushing boundaries, with normal parents, enforcing them.
***
Any version of the above story? Wouldn’t make me blink. I’ve heard it hundreds and hundreds of times, from as many parents, as we’re dishing about raising kids on the playground, at school waiting to pick them up, at sports practice, at after school activities, at PTA meetings, at birthday parties... it’s just that normal.
So someone says they got so mad they
wanted to break the phone in half? That they almost broke the phone in half? Doesn’t phase me.
Because
wanting to do something, and actually doing it? Are very different things.