My sons are 7, 3, and almost 2. But i've told my husband many times i'm going to make sure they are well rounded, respectful young men. They will learn laundry, cooking, I will drill it into their head to always treat the girl they care about special, and they all have a baby sister so I think it may help them to grow up with her b/c I have a feeling they'll be protective, it's already starting. It'll help them to see them as a human being with feelings, not just a girl. So yes, I am!
2007-03-09 07:28:17
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answer #1
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answered by nymom 5
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My fiancé drilled my little cousin Mac (6) for pushing my daughter (4) down & yelling at her ... I've never seen a guy get so upset seeing a boy mess with a girl before - it really put a smile on my face knowing if we ever did have a little boy he would absolutely raise him to be respectful of women .. no hitting .. no grabbing / groping ... all the things a dad should teach his son .... I don't think my cousin Mac has ever been told " hitting girls is wrong " ... so he didn't really understand since they both were fighting ... my fiancé said he didn't care - there's NO reason a man should EVER hit a woman ... he understood after a few good talks ... !
2007-03-09 05:18:02
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I have a 6 years old son and we are raising him to know that girls are his equal, however you should open doors for them, never hit them, never raise your vioce to a girl. My son had many friends at a recent birthday party and I was glad to see that he played with both boys and girls and included the girls in all activities. We have taught him this by being open and honest and forcoming. We also have a 2 year old daughter who tries his patience however I have seen him walk away numerous times when with a boy it may have led to a fight. Good luck with your daughters and I will continue to raise my son with respect.
2007-03-09 04:39:04
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answer #3
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answered by Melissa F 1
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I don't have a son, but I have a close relationship with a family with boys and girls. I take them all to karate classes, so of course they spar. But that is different.
One boy and girl are close in age. The trouble I see is that the girl hits the boy, and he hits her back. She cries and wails when he hits her, though she doesn't make a sound or complain when she gets hurt in sparring class. She provokes him often. He never makes a sound when he gets hit. So there is some kind of brother-sister dynamic here. He doesn't hit other girls, though (except in sparring class, and he uses self-control there); he doesn't hit boys either. So I guess he is learning the right lesson mostly, but it does bother me that he and his sister hit each other. They are 9 and 10.
2007-03-09 04:41:25
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answer #4
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answered by The First Dragon 7
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I even have emphasised this element with my son from little on. he's 22 now. To on the present time, I even have never heard him use disrespectful words to talk with women, and that i've got not seen him cope with a woman or lady as a intercourse merchandise. of direction I have not have been given any way of understanding what he does whilst he's out of my sight and listening to, yet he's the fashion of individual who never says something undesirable or disrespectful approximately everyone. He has been in a relationship with a surprising youthful lady for a pair of years now, and that i see in basic terms equality and mutual help between them. i'm very happy with him. extra: His dad replaced into and is an surprising place type for this, and that's between the excuses I married him.
2016-11-23 17:26:12
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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We have always taugh our boy to be respectful of girls/women. He needs to hold open doors, pull out chairs and understand that a man NEVER hits a girl under almost all circumstances.
2007-03-09 05:13:33
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answer #6
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answered by Devdude 5
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absolutely. i raised 3 boys and one girl alone. my kids were all taught to be respectful of each other, and the opposite gender. my sons were and still are, very respectful and protective of their sister. this has to start when they are young, and be reinforced throughout the "informative" years. we practiced appropriate dating and relationship skills, etc., before they were allowed to date also. something that was really helpful, was that it was part of their curriculum in junior high school that the parents had to participate in. girls should also be taught not to hit, and to behave like they deserve to be respected.
2007-03-09 04:44:11
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answer #7
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answered by pirate00girl 6
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I raised my son to never ever hit a girl and as a man to never ever hit his wife. As an adult man, he knows if he tried something like that I'm not scared of him and would rip his *** up one side and down another.
2007-03-09 05:39:34
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I have 2 sons.I am trying to rais ethem to be gentelmen(as that is a rare breed nowdays)I want them to be respectful of all people and that includes weman.My husband helps alot in that area he opens the door for me and so now my little boy opens the doors for me and his sisterand when we are in public he will run to open doors for weman or elderly.He is only 6 yrs old and already learning fast like I said it helps to have his father showing him .I got a report from his teacher saying how proud she was of him they was in line and he told his friend lets let the girls go to the front ladies go first..Yes I was SOOOO proud.
2007-03-09 05:54:36
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answer #9
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answered by anntanner 2
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I've raised my three sons to have a sense of personal responsibility regarding accepted boundaries towards everyone they encounter, not just females. That is all you can reasonably expect.
2007-03-09 04:34:55
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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