didn’t know how to comfort him. I ɹnally screamed back,
‘Sometimes I hate you!’ ”
“My son was two and scratched his baby brother’s face so
hard that he left marks. I spanked his bottom, like ɹve hard
swats. Then I left the room, walked down the hall, turned
back around, and spanked him probably ɹve more swats
again. I screamed at him so loud, I terrified him.”
“After I had told my daughter to watch out for her little
brother running in front of the swing, she almost swung right
into him. I was so mad that even in front of other people at
the park I said to her, ‘What’s wrong with you—are you
stupid?’ ”
These are some pretty awful parenting experiences, aren’t
they? They represent our downstairs moments, the times
when we’re so out of control that we say or do something
we’d never let anyone else say or do to our child.
The confessions above come from real parents whom we
know personally. And although it may surprise you, each of
those parents does a great job at raising their kids. But like the
rest of us, they just lose it from time to time and say and do
things they wish they hadn’t.
Could you add your own downstairs moment to the list
above? Of course you could. You’re a parent, and you’re
human. We see it time and again when we speak to and
counsel parents: in high-stress parenting situations, parents
make mistakes. All of us do.