Blue Ginger, I think you may be my long-lost twin! I have absolutely zero patience with kids behaving badly, and if they belong to a relative, I'll not only tell off the kid but the parents too.
I've apparently got a really scary grin, and I use it to excellent effect. All it takes is a few seconds of me staring with that grin fixed on my face and whatever kid I'm directing it at goes running off for mommy or daddy, screaming in terror. It works all the way up to teenagers.
My nephew (3 years old now) is fascinated by our cats. I keep telling him that if he bothers the cats, he WILL get scratched, and it will be his own fault. Sure enough, he got scratched a couple of times and came crying because the kitty was mean to him and got told it was his own fault and he'd get no sympathy from me for doing something I've told him over and over not to do.
I've also got a standard response when he (and until she grew out of it, his older sister) throws a tantrum. He gets scooped up under his arms, held at arm's length and taken to the computer room, where I set him in the middle of the room and shut the door then stand with my back to the door (inside the room with him) and just stand there silently and expressionlessly watching until he decides he's done with the tantrum. It takes a remarkably short time for him to quit acting out when I do this. I think he's figured out (like his sister did before him) that I will not pander to bad behavior.
I've apparently got a really scary grin, and I use it to excellent effect. All it takes is a few seconds of me staring with that grin fixed on my face and whatever kid I'm directing it at goes running off for mommy or daddy, screaming in terror. It works all the way up to teenagers.
My nephew (3 years old now) is fascinated by our cats. I keep telling him that if he bothers the cats, he WILL get scratched, and it will be his own fault. Sure enough, he got scratched a couple of times and came crying because the kitty was mean to him and got told it was his own fault and he'd get no sympathy from me for doing something I've told him over and over not to do.
I've also got a standard response when he (and until she grew out of it, his older sister) throws a tantrum. He gets scooped up under his arms, held at arm's length and taken to the computer room, where I set him in the middle of the room and shut the door then stand with my back to the door (inside the room with him) and just stand there silently and expressionlessly watching until he decides he's done with the tantrum. It takes a remarkably short time for him to quit acting out when I do this. I think he's figured out (like his sister did before him) that I will not pander to bad behavior.

Personally, I'm childless and fond of my sleep too.
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