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	<title>bullying prevention Archives - My Crumby World</title>
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		<title>When the School Calls: How to Respond if You’re Receiving Reports About Your Child’s Behavior</title>
		<link>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/26/when-the-school-calls-how-to-respond-if-youre-receiving-reports-about-your-childs-behavior/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 18:04:31 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Parent Pantry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti-bullying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[behavior at school]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotional intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kind girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[preadolescent girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[raising kind kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social and emotional learning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social skills for children]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[warning signs from school]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[warning signs of bullying behavior]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mycrumbyworld.com/?p=1354</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>No parent wants to receive that phone call. The one where a teacher mentions your child has been teasing classmates, excluding others, being disruptive, or repeatedly getting into trouble socially. It’s uncomfortable. Emotional. Sometimes even shocking. But in Part 7 of our 7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,” [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/26/when-the-school-calls-how-to-respond-if-youre-receiving-reports-about-your-childs-behavior/">When the School Calls: How to Respond if You’re Receiving Reports About Your Child’s Behavior</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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									<p data-start="154" data-end="199">No parent wants to receive <em data-start="181" data-end="187">that</em> phone call.</p><p data-start="201" data-end="354">The one where a teacher mentions your child has been teasing classmates, excluding others, being disruptive, or repeatedly getting into trouble socially.</p><p data-start="356" data-end="411">It’s uncomfortable. Emotional. Sometimes even shocking.</p><p data-start="413" data-end="653">But in Part 7 of our <strong data-start="434" data-end="519">7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,”</strong> we’re talking about why those reports matter, and how responding with connection instead of defensiveness can make all the difference.</p><hr data-start="655" data-end="658" /><h3 data-section-id="9o7ix1" data-start="660" data-end="698"><span role="text"><strong data-start="664" data-end="698">Don’t Ignore the Warning Signs</strong></span></h3><p data-start="700" data-end="840">If teachers, counselors, coaches, or other adults are consistently noticing concerning social behavior, it’s important not to dismiss it as:</p><ul data-start="841" data-end="916"><li data-section-id="1sg8g1a" data-start="841" data-end="862">“Kids being kids.”</li><li data-section-id="1uix307" data-start="863" data-end="886">Personality clashes</li><li data-section-id="1sz6d99" data-start="887" data-end="916">Overreactions from others</li></ul><p data-start="918" data-end="1057">While no child is perfect, repeated concerns are often signals that your daughter may be struggling socially, emotionally, or relationally.</p><p data-start="1059" data-end="1156">And the earlier you address those behaviors, the better the outcome can be&#8230;for everyone involved.</p><hr data-start="1158" data-end="1161" /><h3 data-section-id="m4fcp1" data-start="1163" data-end="1209"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1167" data-end="1209">What School Reports May Be Telling You</strong></span></h3><p data-start="1211" data-end="1250">Sometimes bullying behaviors stem from:</p><ul data-start="1251" data-end="1432"><li data-section-id="1d6cnxw" data-start="1251" data-end="1286">A need for attention or control</li><li data-section-id="1x5ykl3" data-start="1287" data-end="1319">Insecurity or low self-worth</li><li data-section-id="kxz0ih" data-start="1320" data-end="1357">Peer pressure and social dynamics</li><li data-section-id="fiu659" data-start="1358" data-end="1399">Exposure to unhealthy online behavior</li><li data-section-id="1r8nav" data-start="1400" data-end="1432">Difficulty managing emotions</li></ul><p data-start="1434" data-end="1569">This doesn’t make your child “bad.”<br data-start="1469" data-end="1472" />It means your child may need guidance, support, accountability, and stronger communication tools.</p><hr data-start="1571" data-end="1574" /><h3 data-section-id="1qk9mzd" data-start="1576" data-end="1645"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1580" data-end="1645">What To Do (With Penelope Pumpernickel’s Courageous Heart 💛)</strong></span></h3><p><img decoding="async" class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-330" src="https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1-150x150.png" alt="Penelope Pumpernickel" width="150" height="150" srcset="https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1-150x150.png 150w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1-300x300.png 300w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1-768x768.png 768w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1-600x600.png 600w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1-100x100.png 100w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Penelope-Pumpernickel-1.png 1000w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></p><p data-start="1647" data-end="1832"> </p><p data-start="1647" data-end="1832"> </p><p data-start="1647" data-end="1832"> </p><p data-start="1647" data-end="1832"> </p><p data-start="1647" data-end="1832"><strong data-start="1647" data-end="1681">1. Stay calm and listen openly</strong><br data-start="1681" data-end="1684" />It’s natural to want to defend your child—but listening first creates space for growth.<br data-start="1771" data-end="1774" />Approach the conversation with curiosity instead of shame.</p><p data-start="1834" data-end="1933"><strong data-start="1834" data-end="1879">2. Communicate regularly without judgment</strong><br data-start="1879" data-end="1882" />Create safe opportunities for honest conversations:</p><ul data-start="1934" data-end="2037"><li data-section-id="n7lujb" data-start="1934" data-end="1962">“Tell me what happened.”</li><li data-section-id="1vhvhyx" data-start="1963" data-end="1999">“How are things going socially?”</li><li data-section-id="m8oi6u" data-start="2000" data-end="2037">“Do you feel pressure to fit in?”</li></ul><p data-start="2039" data-end="2117">Children are more likely to open up when they don’t fear immediate punishment.</p><p data-start="2119" data-end="2213"><strong data-start="2119" data-end="2182">3. Set clear expectations about kindness and accountability</strong><br data-start="2182" data-end="2185" />Your daughter needs to know:</p><ul data-start="2214" data-end="2294"><li data-section-id="h6h61v" data-start="2214" data-end="2234">Kindness matters</li><li data-section-id="1qa8ncy" data-start="2235" data-end="2264">Respect is non-negotiable</li><li data-section-id="1ruhcq9" data-start="2265" data-end="2294">Actions have consequences</li></ul><p data-start="2296" data-end="2375">At the same time, remind her that mistakes are opportunities to learn and grow.</p><p data-start="2377" data-end="2474"><strong data-start="2377" data-end="2416">4. Pay attention to online activity</strong><br data-start="2416" data-end="2419" />Social dynamics don’t stop when school ends.<br data-start="2463" data-end="2466" />Monitor:</p><ul data-start="2475" data-end="2562"><li data-section-id="bypums" data-start="2475" data-end="2495">Social media use</li><li data-section-id="1453s62" data-start="2496" data-end="2511">Group chats</li><li data-section-id="ank6pk" data-start="2512" data-end="2530">Phone behavior</li><li data-section-id="k013s5" data-start="2531" data-end="2562">Online teasing or exclusion</li></ul><p data-start="2564" data-end="2639">Many bullying behaviors now continue digitally, often away from adult eyes.</p><p data-start="2641" data-end="2720"><strong data-start="2641" data-end="2669">5. Get support if needed</strong><br data-start="2669" data-end="2672" />If patterns continue, don’t hesitate to involve:</p><ul data-start="2721" data-end="2801"><li data-section-id="1voxgf" data-start="2721" data-end="2742">School counselors</li><li data-section-id="frs2jz" data-start="2743" data-end="2757">Therapists</li><li data-section-id="df97mc" data-start="2758" data-end="2769">Mentors</li><li data-section-id="15ars4i" data-start="2770" data-end="2801">Parenting support resources</li></ul><p data-start="2803" data-end="2847">Asking for help is a strength—not a failure.</p><hr data-start="2849" data-end="2852" /><h3 data-section-id="kzxi9k" data-start="2854" data-end="2890"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2858" data-end="2890">Connection Is Still the Goal</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2892" data-end="2985">When parents respond with only punishment, children often become more defensive or secretive.</p><p data-start="2987" data-end="3184">But when accountability is paired with connection, something powerful happens:<br />👉 Kids begin to feel safe enough to reflect<br data-start="3110" data-end="3113" />👉 Conversations become more honest<br data-start="3148" data-end="3151" />👉 Real change becomes possible</p><p data-start="3186" data-end="3250">That relationship with your daughter is your greatest influence.</p><hr data-start="3252" data-end="3255" /><h3 data-section-id="mbor05" data-start="3257" data-end="3288"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3261" data-end="3288">Why This Series Matters</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3290" data-end="3418">As girls get closer to adolescence, social relationships become increasingly complex, and social media intensifies the pressure.</p><p data-start="3420" data-end="3499">Our goal as parents isn’t to raise perfect children.<br data-start="3472" data-end="3475" />It’s to raise girls who:</p><ul data-start="3500" data-end="3646"><li data-section-id="55gwts" data-start="3500" data-end="3522">Understand empathy</li><li data-section-id="fygp7j" data-start="3523" data-end="3546">Take responsibility</li><li data-section-id="uu3pby" data-start="3547" data-end="3589">Know how to treat others with kindness</li><li data-section-id="5xhbix" data-start="3590" data-end="3646">Feel secure enough not to seek power through cruelty</li></ul><p data-start="3648" data-end="3675">And that work starts early.</p><hr data-start="3677" data-end="3680" /><h3 data-section-id="i6y2hg" data-start="3682" data-end="3730"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3686" data-end="3730">Thank You for Joining This 7-Part Series</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3732" data-end="3779">Over the course of this series, we’ve explored:</p><ol data-start="3780" data-end="3946"><li data-section-id="1xnn54e" data-start="3780" data-end="3806">Controlling behaviors</li><li data-section-id="1uz4fol" data-start="3807" data-end="3825">Hurtful jokes</li><li data-section-id="1xr8hfl" data-start="3826" data-end="3842">Entitlement</li><li data-section-id="dnu5z6" data-start="3843" data-end="3880">(Additional signs in the series)</li><li data-section-id="s6u7or" data-start="3881" data-end="3900">Blaming others</li><li data-section-id="51s0gd" data-start="3901" data-end="3921">Lack of empathy</li><li data-section-id="dlaxr7" data-start="3922" data-end="3946">Reports from school</li></ol><p data-start="3948" data-end="4071">Each topic is designed to help parents recognize subtle warning signs and respond with awareness, connection, and guidance.</p><p data-start="4073" data-end="4269">Because when we strengthen communication with our daughters early, we help protect them from both participating in—and becoming victims of—the social cruelty that often emerges during adolescence.</p><hr data-start="4271" data-end="4274" /><h3 data-section-id="1q38wdv" data-start="4276" data-end="4322"><span role="text"><strong data-start="4280" data-end="4322">Want More Parenting Tools and Support?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="4324" data-end="4513">At <em data-start="4327" data-end="4344">My Crumby World</em>, we’re passionate about helping parents build stronger relationships with their daughters in a world increasingly shaped by social media, comparison, and disconnection.</p><p data-start="4515" data-end="4668">👉 Follow along for more resources, conversations, and tools designed to help your daughter grow into a kind, confident, emotionally healthy young woman.</p>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/26/when-the-school-calls-how-to-respond-if-youre-receiving-reports-about-your-childs-behavior/">When the School Calls: How to Respond if You’re Receiving Reports About Your Child’s Behavior</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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		<title>Is Your Child Struggling with Empathy? How to Help Her Develop Compassion and Emotional Awareness</title>
		<link>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/21/is-your-child-struggling-with-empathy-how-to-help-her-develop-compassion-and-emotional-awareness/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[mycrumbyworld]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 15:16:06 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Parent Pantry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti-bullying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[character building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotional intelligence in kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[preadolescent girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[raising kind kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social and emotional learning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social skills in kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teaching empathy]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mycrumbyworld.com/?p=1346</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>One of the most important qualities a child can develop isn’t intelligence, popularity, or talent. It’s empathy. In Part 6 of our 7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,” we’re exploring a behavior that often sits at the heart of social cruelty: a lack of empathy. Because when a [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/21/is-your-child-struggling-with-empathy-how-to-help-her-develop-compassion-and-emotional-awareness/">Is Your Child Struggling with Empathy? How to Help Her Develop Compassion and Emotional Awareness</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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									<p data-start="155" data-end="253">One of the most important qualities a child can develop isn’t intelligence, popularity, or talent.</p><p data-start="255" data-end="268">It’s empathy.</p><p data-start="270" data-end="470">In Part 6 of our <strong data-start="287" data-end="372">7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,”</strong> we’re exploring a behavior that often sits at the heart of social cruelty: <strong data-start="448" data-end="470">a lack of empathy.</strong></p><p data-start="472" data-end="635">Because when a child struggles to understand or care about how others feel, it becomes much easier to dismiss pain, exclude peers, or laugh at someone else’s hurt.</p><hr data-start="637" data-end="640" /><h3 data-section-id="1mbez77" data-start="642" data-end="688"><span role="text"><strong data-start="646" data-end="688">What Does a Lack of Empathy Look Like?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="690" data-end="721">Sometimes the signs are subtle.</p><p data-start="723" data-end="738">Your child may:</p><ul data-start="739" data-end="926"><li data-section-id="117qvpw" data-start="739" data-end="777">Laugh when another child gets hurt</li><li data-section-id="4nr8us" data-start="778" data-end="815">Tease someone for being emotional</li><li data-section-id="190ayar" data-start="816" data-end="864">Show little concern when someone is excluded</li><li data-section-id="1halpj0" data-start="865" data-end="926">Seem emotionally disconnected from the feelings of others</li></ul><p data-start="928" data-end="1028">These moments can feel alarming as a parent, but they are also opportunities for teaching and growth.</p><p data-start="1030" data-end="1168">Empathy is not simply something children “have” or “don’t have.”<br data-start="1094" data-end="1097" />It’s a skill that can be nurtured, modeled, and strengthened over time.</p><hr data-start="1170" data-end="1173" /><h3 data-section-id="1cscgd7" data-start="1175" data-end="1210"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1179" data-end="1210">Why Empathy Matters So Much</strong></span></h3><p data-start="1212" data-end="1243">Empathy is what helps children:</p><ul data-start="1244" data-end="1405"><li data-section-id="1p6byed" data-start="1244" data-end="1276">Build meaningful friendships</li><li data-section-id="1o36442" data-start="1277" data-end="1308">Resolve conflict peacefully</li><li data-section-id="hlmxc9" data-start="1309" data-end="1355">Recognize when their behavior hurts others</li><li data-section-id="11xh595" data-start="1356" data-end="1405">Develop emotional intelligence and compassion</li></ul><p data-start="1407" data-end="1522">Without empathy, social interactions can become centered on power, status, or self-interest rather than connection.</p><p data-start="1524" data-end="1600">And in today’s world, especially online, that disconnect can become dangerous.</p><hr data-start="1602" data-end="1605" /><h3 data-section-id="1jsz1hv" data-start="1607" data-end="1670"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1611" data-end="1670">What To Do (With Whitney Wheat’s Heart for Fairness 🧡)</strong></span></h3>								</div>
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									<p><strong data-start="1672" data-end="1724">1. Address the behavior with patience, not shame</strong><br data-start="1724" data-end="1727" />Instead of labeling your child as “mean,” focus on helping her understand emotions and consequences.<br data-start="1827" data-end="1830" />Children learn best when they feel emotionally safe enough to reflect.</p>								</div>
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									<p data-start="1902" data-end="2018"><strong data-start="1902" data-end="1933">2. Teach emotional literacy</strong><br data-start="1933" data-end="1936" />Help your daughter identify feelings&#8211;&gt;both her own and others’.<br data-start="1998" data-end="2001" />Use phrases like:</p><ul data-start="2019" data-end="2096"><li data-section-id="1af94un" data-start="2019" data-end="2048">“She looks disappointed.”</li><li data-section-id="rpesz0" data-start="2049" data-end="2096">“What do you think he felt in that moment?”</li></ul><p data-start="2098" data-end="2171">The more children can name emotions, the better they can respond to them.</p>								</div>
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									<p data-start="2173" data-end="2236"><strong data-start="2173" data-end="2208">3. Encourage perspective-taking</strong><br data-start="2208" data-end="2211" />Ask thoughtful questions:</p><ul data-start="2237" data-end="2337"><li data-section-id="1i0ycc7" data-start="2237" data-end="2286">“How would you feel if that happened to you?”</li><li data-section-id="17wsu1b" data-start="2287" data-end="2337">“What do you think she needed in that moment?”</li></ul><p data-start="2339" data-end="2425">Role-playing situations can also help children practice empathy in a safe environment.</p>								</div>
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									<p><strong data-start="2427" data-end="2456">4. Model compassion daily</strong><br data-start="2456" data-end="2459" />Your daughter watches how you treat people, especially when others are struggling.<br data-start="2540" data-end="2543" />Small acts of kindness, patience, and understanding teach powerful lessons.</p>								</div>
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									<h3 data-section-id="pzxzj8" data-start="2625" data-end="2669"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2629" data-end="2669">Connection Is the Root of Compassion</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2671" data-end="2766">Children who feel emotionally connected at home are often more emotionally available to others.</p><p data-start="2768" data-end="2824">That’s why building communication early matters so much.</p><p data-start="2826" data-end="2949">When your daughter feels seen, heard, and valued, she’s more likely to extend those same feelings to the people around her.</p><hr data-start="2951" data-end="2954" /><h3 data-section-id="7hvuz6" data-start="2956" data-end="2994"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2960" data-end="2994">Why This Matters as Girls Grow</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2996" data-end="3191">As girls approach adolescence, friendships become increasingly emotional and socially layered. Without empathy, teasing and exclusion can quickly escalate into relational aggression and bullying.</p><p data-start="3193" data-end="3224">But empathy changes everything.</p><p data-start="3226" data-end="3241">It helps girls:</p><ul data-start="3242" data-end="3369"><li data-section-id="1x7yxrp" data-start="3242" data-end="3267">Become kinder friends</li><li data-section-id="8y6s7q" data-start="3268" data-end="3305">Handle conflict more thoughtfully</li><li data-section-id="ubnovm" data-start="3306" data-end="3369">Build confidence rooted in compassion instead of comparison</li></ul><p data-start="3371" data-end="3450">And those are the skills that create healthier relationships for years to come.</p><hr data-start="3452" data-end="3455" /><h3 data-section-id="2amj33" data-start="3457" data-end="3504"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3461" data-end="3504">You’re Helping Shape More Than Behavior</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3506" data-end="3651">This is Part 6 of our 7-part series designed to help parents recognize subtle warning signs and respond with intention, connection, and guidance.</p><p data-start="3653" data-end="3796">Because raising compassionate girls isn’t about perfection, it’s about helping them understand the power their words and actions have on others.</p><hr data-start="3798" data-end="3801" /><h3 data-section-id="1dr8o2v" data-start="3803" data-end="3859"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3807" data-end="3859">Want More Tools to Build Empathy and Connection?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3861" data-end="4046">At <em data-start="3864" data-end="3881">My Crumby World</em>, we’re passionate about helping parents strengthen communication and connection with their daughters before the pressures of adolescence and social media take hold.</p><p data-start="4048" data-end="4201">👉 Follow along for more practical parenting tools, activities, and encouragement designed to help girls grow into kind, emotionally healthy young women.</p>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/21/is-your-child-struggling-with-empathy-how-to-help-her-develop-compassion-and-emotional-awareness/">Is Your Child Struggling with Empathy? How to Help Her Develop Compassion and Emotional Awareness</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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		<title>Is Your Child Blaming Others? Here’s How to Teach Accountability with Connection</title>
		<link>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/12/is-your-child-blaming-others-heres-how-to-teach-accountability-with-connection/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[mycrumbyworld]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 May 2026 20:53:26 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Parent Pantry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[child behavior help]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotional intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[preadolescent girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social skills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teaching accountability to kids]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mycrumbyworld.com/?p=1322</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>As parents, one of the hardest things to hear is, “It wasn’t my fault.” And while that may seem like a small, everyday response, consistently blaming others can be a deeper signal worth paying attention to. In Part 5 of our 7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others, and How to Help,” [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/12/is-your-child-blaming-others-heres-how-to-teach-accountability-with-connection/">Is Your Child Blaming Others? Here’s How to Teach Accountability with Connection</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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									<p data-start="129" data-end="200">As parents, one of the hardest things to hear is, “It wasn’t my fault.”</p><p data-start="202" data-end="340">And while that may seem like a small, everyday response, <strong data-start="259" data-end="290">consistently blaming others</strong> can be a deeper signal worth paying attention to.</p><p data-start="342" data-end="591">In Part 5 of our <strong data-start="359" data-end="444">7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others, and How to Help,”</strong> we’re diving into a behavior that can quietly impact friendships, confidence, and emotional growth: <strong data-start="545" data-end="591">avoiding responsibility by blaming others.</strong></p><hr data-start="593" data-end="596" /><h3 data-section-id="15x8arh" data-start="598" data-end="632"><span role="text"><strong data-start="602" data-end="632">Why Blaming Others Matters</strong></span></h3><p data-start="634" data-end="678">When a child regularly shifts blame, it can:</p><ul data-start="679" data-end="820"><li data-section-id="12b824g" data-start="679" data-end="731">Prevent her from learning important life lessons</li><li data-section-id="1tl33nr" data-start="732" data-end="764">Strain friendships and trust</li><li data-section-id="1abkl3q" data-start="765" data-end="820">Block the development of empathy and accountability</li></ul><p data-start="822" data-end="985">Often, this behavior isn’t about defiance—it’s about <strong data-start="875" data-end="889">protection</strong>.<br data-start="890" data-end="893" />Your daughter may be trying to avoid embarrassment, consequences, or uncomfortable feelings.</p><p data-start="987" data-end="1016">And that’s where you come in.</p><hr data-start="1018" data-end="1021" /><h3 data-section-id="3sc3t7" data-start="1023" data-end="1047"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1027" data-end="1047">What to Look For </strong></span></h3><p data-start="1049" data-end="1077">Pay attention if your child:</p><ul data-start="1078" data-end="1251"><li data-section-id="3xlbf0" data-start="1078" data-end="1127">Rarely admits fault, even in small situations</li><li data-section-id="1wrickr" data-start="1128" data-end="1190">Quickly points fingers at siblings, friends, or classmates</li><li data-section-id="1yo0w56" data-start="1191" data-end="1251">Becomes defensive when asked about her role in a problem</li></ul><p data-start="1253" data-end="1344">These patterns offer an opportunity—not for punishment—but for <strong data-start="1316" data-end="1343">teaching and connection</strong>.</p><hr data-start="1346" data-end="1349" /><h3 data-section-id="13m9leq" data-start="1351" data-end="1411"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1355" data-end="1411">What To Do</strong></span></h3><p data-start="1413" data-end="1610"><strong data-start="1413" data-end="1451">1. Stay calm and lead with empathy</strong><br data-start="1451" data-end="1454" />Your tone sets the stage. When you stay grounded, your child feels safe enough to be honest.<br data-start="1546" data-end="1549" />Try: “I’m not upset—I just want to understand what happened.”</p><p data-start="1612" data-end="1774"><strong data-start="1612" data-end="1647">2. Shift from blame to behavior</strong><br data-start="1647" data-end="1650" />Instead of focusing on <em data-start="1673" data-end="1689">who’s at fault</em>, focus on <em data-start="1700" data-end="1715">what happened</em>.<br data-start="1716" data-end="1719" />This helps remove shame and opens the door to learning.</p><p data-start="1776" data-end="1841"><strong data-start="1776" data-end="1808">3. Guide her to see her role</strong><br data-start="1808" data-end="1811" />Ask gentle, guiding questions:</p><ul data-start="1842" data-end="1933"><li data-section-id="2o4cxg" data-start="1842" data-end="1888">“What part do you think you played in this?”</li><li data-section-id="n2a70n" data-start="1889" data-end="1933">“What could you do differently next time?”</li></ul><p data-start="1935" data-end="1992">This builds <strong data-start="1947" data-end="1965">self-awareness</strong>, one small step at a time.</p><p data-start="1994" data-end="2065"><strong data-start="1994" data-end="2029">4. Teach problem-solving skills</strong><br data-start="2029" data-end="2032" />Walk through situations together:</p><ul data-start="2066" data-end="2158"><li data-section-id="4rggqy" data-start="2066" data-end="2091">What was the problem?</li><li data-section-id="18d4da1" data-start="2092" data-end="2118">What were the choices?</li><li data-section-id="ij3uq5" data-start="2119" data-end="2158">What’s a better solution next time?</li></ul><p data-start="2160" data-end="2216">These conversations build confidence and accountability.</p><hr data-start="2218" data-end="2221" /><h3 data-section-id="xygaow" data-start="2223" data-end="2266"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2227" data-end="2266">Connection First, Correction Second</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2268" data-end="2362">Before your daughter can take responsibility, she needs to feel <strong data-start="2332" data-end="2361">safe, seen, and supported</strong>.</p><p data-start="2364" data-end="2421">When you lead with connection instead of correction, you:</p><ul data-start="2422" data-end="2501"><li data-section-id="sqisbq" data-start="2422" data-end="2446">Reduce defensiveness</li><li data-section-id="dca9kp" data-start="2447" data-end="2468">Encourage honesty</li><li data-section-id="16nxac3" data-start="2469" data-end="2501">Strengthen your relationship</li></ul><p data-start="2503" data-end="2615">And that connection? It becomes your greatest tool as she navigates the increasingly complex social world ahead.</p><hr data-start="2617" data-end="2620" /><h3 data-section-id="1n8h809" data-start="2622" data-end="2661"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2626" data-end="2661">Why This Matters for the Future</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2663" data-end="2878">As girls grow, social dynamics become more layered and sometimes more emotionally charged. Without the ability to take responsibility, blaming behaviors can evolve into conflict, exclusion, or relational aggression.</p><p data-start="2880" data-end="3086">But when you teach accountability early, you’re giving your daughter something powerful:<br />👉 The ability to own her actions<br data-start="3002" data-end="3005" />👉 The confidence to repair relationships<br data-start="3046" data-end="3049" />👉 The empathy to understand others</p><hr data-start="3088" data-end="3091" /><h3 data-section-id="1mwgr1y" data-start="3093" data-end="3125"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3097" data-end="3125">You’re Not Alone in This</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3127" data-end="3243">This is Part 5 of our 7-part series designed to help you recognize early signs and respond with intention, not fear.</p><p data-start="3245" data-end="3392">Because raising kind, confident, and socially aware girls doesn’t happen by accident&#8230;it happens through <strong data-start="3349" data-end="3391">connection, conversation, and guidance</strong>.</p><hr data-start="3394" data-end="3397" /><h3 data-section-id="j8sb7q" data-start="3399" data-end="3433"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3403" data-end="3433">Want More Tools Like This?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3435" data-end="3603">If you’re ready to build stronger communication with your daughter and guide her through these critical years, we&#8217;ve created resources to help you every step of the way.</p><p data-start="3605" data-end="3741">👉 Follow along with <em data-start="3626" data-end="3643">My Crumby World</em> for more insights, activities, and connection-building tools designed just for you and your girl.</p>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/12/is-your-child-blaming-others-heres-how-to-teach-accountability-with-connection/">Is Your Child Blaming Others? Here’s How to Teach Accountability with Connection</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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		<title>When Children Keep Secrets, It Could Be a Warning Sign of Bullying Behavior.</title>
		<link>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/07/when-children-keep-secrets-it-could-be-a-warning-sign-of-bullying-behavior/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[mycrumbyworld]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 17:01:42 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Parent Pantry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying behaviors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[character building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[keeping secrets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[signs your child might be a bully]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social and emotional learning]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mycrumbyworld.com/?p=1307</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>As parents, we often worry about whether our children are being bullied. But one of the more difficult conversations to have is the possibility that our child may be participating in behaviors that are hurting someone else. Bullying doesn’t always look like loud aggression or obvious cruelty. Sometimes it hides quietly behind secrecy, withdrawn behavior, [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/07/when-children-keep-secrets-it-could-be-a-warning-sign-of-bullying-behavior/">When Children Keep Secrets, It Could Be a Warning Sign of Bullying Behavior.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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									<p data-start="115" data-end="340">As parents, we often worry about whether our children are <em data-start="173" data-end="188">being bullied</em>. But one of the more difficult conversations to have is the possibility that our child may be participating in behaviors that are hurting someone else.</p><p data-start="342" data-end="545">Bullying doesn’t always look like loud aggression or obvious cruelty. Sometimes it hides quietly behind secrecy, withdrawn behavior, hidden online activity, or friendships parents know very little about.</p><p data-start="547" data-end="659">That’s why one of the signs we’re discussing in our <em data-start="599" data-end="648">Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others</em> series is:</p><h2 data-section-id="19thzxg" data-start="661" data-end="691">🚩 Being Secretive</h2><p data-start="693" data-end="863">If your child suddenly becomes unusually secretive about their social life, online activity, text messages, or friendships, it may be time to pay closer attention.</p><p data-start="865" data-end="1145">This does <strong data-start="875" data-end="882">not</strong> automatically mean your child is bullying someone. Kids deserve privacy as they grow and develop independence. However, when secrecy becomes excessive or defensive, it can sometimes signal that a child knows their behavior would concern you if you discovered it.</p><p data-start="1147" data-end="1168">Examples may include:</p><ul data-start="1169" data-end="1501"><li data-section-id="1eo7p1j" data-start="1169" data-end="1215">Quickly hiding screens when adults walk by</li><li data-section-id="6cpe9t" data-start="1216" data-end="1263">Refusing to discuss what’s happening online</li><li data-section-id="1rlhcos" data-start="1264" data-end="1311">Secret group chats or social media accounts</li><li data-section-id="1lavz3c" data-start="1312" data-end="1357">Increased defensiveness about friendships</li><li data-section-id="1hwae2c" data-start="1358" data-end="1443">Whispering, deleting messages, or isolating themselves during online interactions</li><li data-section-id="qptpb7" data-start="1444" data-end="1501">They laugh about situations that they suddenly refuse to explain.</li></ul><p data-start="1503" data-end="1654">In today’s digital world, social cruelty often happens quietly&#8230;through exclusion, screenshots, gossip, fake accounts, or group chats parents never see.</p><p data-start="1656" data-end="1737">And unfortunately, kids sometimes participate simply because they want to fit in.</p><hr data-start="1739" data-end="1742" /><h2 data-section-id="3zgkzr" data-start="1744" data-end="1793">What Whitney Wheat Wants Kids to Understand</h2><p data-start="1795" data-end="1915">In <em data-start="1798" data-end="1815">My Crumby World</em>, Whitney Wheat reminds us that honesty, fairness, and kindness matter; even when nobody is watching.</p><p data-start="1917" data-end="2075">Whitney knows that secrets can sometimes feel exciting, especially when kids want approval from peers. But she also teaches that there’s a difference between:</p><ul data-start="2076" data-end="2223"><li data-section-id="11ghhei" data-start="2076" data-end="2147"><em data-start="2081" data-end="2098">Healthy secrets</em> (like planning a surprise birthday party), and</li><li data-section-id="ilk7q7" data-start="2148" data-end="2223"><em data-start="2153" data-end="2172">Unhealthy secrets</em> that could hurt someone emotionally or physically.</li></ul><p data-start="2225" data-end="2283">One of the most powerful things we can teach kids is this:</p><blockquote data-start="2285" data-end="2392"><p data-start="2287" data-end="2392">“If you feel like you have to hide it from the adults who love you, it may not be the right thing to do.”</p></blockquote><p data-start="2394" data-end="2433"><strong>That lesson matters now more than ever.</strong></p><hr data-start="2435" data-end="2438" /><h2 data-section-id="1qu8tss" data-start="2440" data-end="2477">The Rise of Secret Social Lives</h2><p data-start="2479" data-end="2574">Many parents underestimate just how quickly kids can develop an entirely separate online world.</p><p data-start="2576" data-end="2606">Children today are navigating:</p><ul data-start="2607" data-end="2778"><li data-section-id="1yhspn7" data-start="2607" data-end="2627">Snapchat streaks</li><li data-section-id="kqvbh3" data-start="2628" data-end="2651">Private group chats</li><li data-section-id="jd7mdq" data-start="2652" data-end="2668">Gaming chats</li><li data-section-id="zef3wn" data-start="2669" data-end="2698">Fake accounts (“finstas”)</li><li data-section-id="kya15l" data-start="2699" data-end="2724">Disappearing messages</li><li data-section-id="1lbfgdj" data-start="2725" data-end="2778">Secret language and emojis adults don’t recognize</li></ul><p data-start="2780" data-end="2896">Sometimes, children who struggle socially may engage in bullying to avoid becoming the next target themselves.</p><p data-start="2898" data-end="2955">This is why connection—&gt;<strong>not interrogation</strong>&lt;—is so important.</p><hr data-start="2957" data-end="2960" /><h2 data-section-id="1qykgd6" data-start="2962" data-end="3002">💛 What To Do If You Notice This Sign</h2><p data-start="3004" data-end="3040">The goal is not to shame your child.</p><p data-start="3042" data-end="3171">The goal is to understand <em data-start="3068" data-end="3073">why</em> secrecy is happening and help guide them back toward empathy, honesty, and healthy relationships.</p><h3 data-section-id="cx6gn7" data-start="3173" data-end="3213">1. Become More Curious Than Reactive</h3><p data-start="3214" data-end="3284">If kids fear immediate punishment, they often become <em data-start="3267" data-end="3273">more</em> secretive.</p><p data-start="3286" data-end="3297">Instead of:</p><ul data-start="3298" data-end="3416"><li data-section-id="5l2oz" data-start="3298" data-end="3329">“What are you hiding?”<br data-start="3322" data-end="3325" />Try:</li><li data-section-id="b6flq3" data-start="3330" data-end="3416">“You seem more private lately. Is something going on socially that feels difficult?”</li></ul><p data-start="3418" data-end="3477">Gentle conversations open doors that accusations slam shut.</p><hr data-start="3479" data-end="3482" /><h3 data-section-id="10dr7ic" data-start="3484" data-end="3516">2. Practice Active Listening</h3><p data-start="3517" data-end="3579">Many kids shut down because they feel judged or misunderstood.</p><p data-start="3581" data-end="3603">When your child talks:</p><ul data-start="3604" data-end="3729"><li data-section-id="198mk22" data-start="3604" data-end="3635">Listen without interrupting</li><li data-section-id="1baq96c" data-start="3636" data-end="3649">Stay calm</li><li data-section-id="1vyq42e" data-start="3650" data-end="3684">Avoid overreacting immediately</li><li data-section-id="1j6v606" data-start="3685" data-end="3729">Focus on understanding before correcting</li></ul><p data-start="3731" data-end="3787">Sometimes kids reveal important things slowly over time.</p><hr data-start="3789" data-end="3792" /><h3 data-section-id="1kbohty" data-start="3794" data-end="3838">3. Discuss Healthy vs. Unhealthy Secrets</h3><p data-start="3839" data-end="3931">Whitney Wheat would remind kids that good friendships don’t require hiding harmful behavior.</p><p data-start="3933" data-end="3951">Talk openly about:</p><ul data-start="3952" data-end="4066"><li data-section-id="1awt7rl" data-start="3952" data-end="3993">Secrets that protect joy and surprise</li><li data-section-id="w5rphp" data-start="3994" data-end="4066">Versus secrets that involve cruelty, humiliation, exclusion, or fear</li></ul><p data-start="4068" data-end="4143">Helping children recognize this difference builds stronger moral awareness.</p><hr data-start="4145" data-end="4148" /><h3 data-section-id="1lqyy22" data-start="4150" data-end="4183">4. Rebuild Offline Connection</h3><p data-start="4184" data-end="4277">Kids who spend too much time immersed in online social dynamics can lose perspective quickly.</p><p data-start="4279" data-end="4283">Try:</p><ul data-start="4284" data-end="4457"><li data-section-id="vkp2j8" data-start="4284" data-end="4317">Family dinners without phones</li><li data-section-id="14wf0xq" data-start="4318" data-end="4362">Baking together in the  Kitchen (we can help!)</li><li data-section-id="dtprct" data-start="4363" data-end="4401">Outdoor play and shared activities</li><li data-section-id="nbph2l" data-start="4402" data-end="4430">Reading stories together</li><li data-section-id="1tl0zo2" data-start="4431" data-end="4457">Simple one-on-one time</li></ul><p data-start="4459" data-end="4496">Connection creates space for honesty.</p><hr data-start="4498" data-end="4501" /><h2 data-section-id="1nue14d" data-start="4503" data-end="4539">Kids Need Guidance, Not Labels</h2><p data-start="4541" data-end="4648">It’s important to remember:<br />A child who participates in bullying behavior is not automatically a “bad kid.”</p><p data-start="4650" data-end="4669">Sometimes children:</p><ul data-start="4670" data-end="4813"><li data-section-id="fepf4u" data-start="4670" data-end="4694">Follow peer pressure</li><li data-section-id="1hb7uvm" data-start="4695" data-end="4723">Struggle with insecurity</li><li data-section-id="4tmxpy" data-start="4724" data-end="4750">Want social acceptance</li><li data-section-id="1rdupy8" data-start="4751" data-end="4778">Lack emotional maturity</li><li data-section-id="1jakva3" data-start="4779" data-end="4813">Mimic the behavior they see online</li></ul><p data-start="4815" data-end="4852">Our job as parents is not perfection.</p><p data-start="4854" data-end="4957">Our job is to help kids develop empathy, accountability, courage, and emotional awareness as they grow.</p><p data-start="4959" data-end="5010">That’s exactly why conversations like these matter.</p><hr data-start="5012" data-end="5015" /><h2 data-section-id="ki2tgs" data-start="5017" data-end="5056">🍞 Final Thoughts from Whitney Wheat</h2><p data-start="5058" data-end="5144">In <em data-start="5061" data-end="5078">My Crumby World</em>, we believe strong character is built one small moment at a time.</p><p data-start="5146" data-end="5199">Honesty matters. Compassion matters. Courage matters.</p><p data-start="5201" data-end="5370">And often, the most important parenting happens not during the big dramatic moments, but during the quiet conversations where our kids feel safe enough to tell the truth.</p><p data-start="5372" data-end="5425">Because when connection grows, secrecy often shrinks.</p>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/05/07/when-children-keep-secrets-it-could-be-a-warning-sign-of-bullying-behavior/">When Children Keep Secrets, It Could Be a Warning Sign of Bullying Behavior.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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		<title>Is Your Child Showing Entitlement? How to Build Empathy and True Confidence</title>
		<link>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/29/is-your-child-showing-entitlement-how-to-build-empathy-and-true-confidence/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[mycrumbyworld]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 21:42:01 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Parent Pantry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[character building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[child entitlement behavior]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotional intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting advice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[raising confident kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social and emotional learning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teaching empathy to kids]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mycrumbyworld.com/?p=1291</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>As parents, we all want our daughters to feel confident, valued, and proud of who they are. But sometimes, confidence can quietly shift into something else, a sense of entitlement. In Part 3 of our 7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others&#8230;and How to Help,” we’re exploring a behavior that can impact [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/29/is-your-child-showing-entitlement-how-to-build-empathy-and-true-confidence/">Is Your Child Showing Entitlement? How to Build Empathy and True Confidence</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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									<p data-start="137" data-end="228">As parents, we all want our daughters to feel confident, valued, and proud of who they are.</p><p data-start="230" data-end="321">But sometimes, confidence can quietly shift into something else, <span style="color: #800080;"><strong data-start="294" data-end="320">a sense of entitlement</strong></span>.</p><p data-start="323" data-end="539">In Part 3 of our <span style="color: #0000ff;"><strong data-start="340" data-end="425"><span style="color: #000000;">7-part series:</span> “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others&#8230;and How to Help,”</strong></span> we’re exploring a behavior that can impact friendships and self-worth: <strong data-start="497" data-end="539">believing they are better than others.</strong></p><hr data-start="541" data-end="544" /><h3 data-section-id="10th599" data-start="546" data-end="592"><span role="text"><strong data-start="550" data-end="592">When Confidence Turns into Entitlement</strong></span></h3><p data-start="594" data-end="664">Entitlement doesn’t always show up in obvious ways. It can sound like:</p><ul data-start="665" data-end="762"><li data-section-id="pxrd1t" data-start="665" data-end="693"><span style="color: #800080;">“I deserve to go first.”</span></li><li data-section-id="kki499" data-start="694" data-end="724"><span style="color: #800080;">“She’s not as good as me.”</span></li><li data-section-id="q3r5qb" data-start="725" data-end="762"><span style="color: #800080;">“I don’t want to play with them.”</span></li></ul><p data-start="764" data-end="903">At its core, entitlement often reflects a <strong data-start="806" data-end="838">distorted view of self-worth, </strong>one that is based on comparison, status, or external validation.</p><p data-start="905" data-end="1050">And here’s the important truth:<br data-start="936" data-end="939" />Kids who feel the need to place themselves above others are often still trying to figure out where they belong.</p><hr data-start="1052" data-end="1055" /><h3 data-section-id="h73voh" data-start="1057" data-end="1105"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1061" data-end="1105">What This Behavior Is Really Telling You</strong></span></h3><p data-start="1107" data-end="1188">Rather than labeling your child as “entitled,” consider what might be underneath:</p><ul data-start="1189" data-end="1368"><li data-section-id="1jz808m" data-start="1189" data-end="1251">Are they tying their value to achievements or possessions?</li><li data-section-id="1hbmlyf" data-start="1252" data-end="1311">Are they comparing themselves to others to feel secure?</li><li data-section-id="14mtu9i" data-start="1312" data-end="1368">Are they lacking exposure to different perspectives?</li></ul><p data-start="1370" data-end="1473">These moments are not failures; they are <strong data-start="1410" data-end="1473">opportunities to shape how your daughter defines her worth.</strong></p><hr data-start="1475" data-end="1478" /><h3 data-section-id="ttbzy2" data-start="1480" data-end="1550"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1484" data-end="1550">What To Do </strong></span></h3><p data-start="1552" data-end="1780"><span style="color: #800080;"><strong data-start="1552" data-end="1592">1. Build empathy through perspective</strong></span><br data-start="1592" data-end="1595" />Help your daughter see the world through a wider lens.<br data-start="1649" data-end="1652" />Talk about different backgrounds, experiences, and challenges others may face.<br data-start="1730" data-end="1733" />Ask: “What do you think her day might be like?”</p><p data-start="1782" data-end="2009"><span style="color: #800080;"><strong data-start="1782" data-end="1833">2. Shift the focus to character, not comparison</strong></span><br data-start="1833" data-end="1836" />Celebrate effort, kindness, and perseverance, not just outcomes.<br data-start="1899" data-end="1902" />Instead of: “You’re the best,” try:<br data-start="1937" data-end="1940" />“I love how hard you worked on that,” or “That was really thoughtful.”</p><p data-start="2011" data-end="2212"><span style="color: #800080;"><strong data-start="2011" data-end="2047">3. Reinforce unconditional worth</strong></span><br data-start="2047" data-end="2050" />Your daughter needs to know she is loved exactly as she is, not for what she has or achieves.<br data-start="2142" data-end="2145" />This builds <strong data-start="2157" data-end="2178">secure confidence</strong>, not comparison-based confidence.</p><p data-start="2214" data-end="2393"><span style="color: #800080;"><strong data-start="2214" data-end="2243">4. Avoid comparison traps</strong></span><br data-start="2243" data-end="2246" />Even subtle comparisons (“Why can’t you be more like…”) can reinforce a hierarchy mindset.<br data-start="2336" data-end="2339" />Keep the focus on her growth and her unique strengths.</p><hr data-start="2395" data-end="2398" /><h3 data-section-id="1lrgkoq" data-start="2400" data-end="2434"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2404" data-end="2434">Connection Shapes Identity</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2436" data-end="2567">When your daughter feels deeply connected and secure at home, she’s less likely to seek validation by placing herself above others.</p><p>Instead, she learns:<br /><span style="color: #800080;">♥ “I am enough.”</span><br data-start="2607" data-end="2610" /><span style="color: #800080;"> ♥“Others are valuable too.”</span><br data-start="2639" data-end="2642" /><span style="color: #800080;"> ♥“We all belong.”</span></p><p data-start="2663" data-end="2703">And that’s where true confidence begins.</p><p data-start="2663" data-end="2703"><img decoding="async" class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-328" src="https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough-150x150.png" alt="Samantha Sourdough" width="150" height="150" srcset="https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough-150x150.png 150w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough-300x300.png 300w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough-768x768.png 768w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough-600x600.png 600w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough-100x100.png 100w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Samantha-Sourdough.png 1000w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></p><p data-start="2663" data-end="2703"> </p><hr data-start="2705" data-end="2708" /><h3 data-section-id="7hvuz6" data-start="2710" data-end="2748"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2714" data-end="2748">Why This Matters as Girls Grow</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2750" data-end="2924">As girls move toward adolescence, social hierarchies can become more pronounced. Without guidance, entitlement can evolve into exclusion, judgment, and relational aggression.</p><p data-start="2926" data-end="3021">But when you intentionally build empathy and grounded self-worth, you’re helping your daughter:</p><ul data-start="3022" data-end="3129"><li data-section-id="1gsmspy" data-start="3022" data-end="3050">Form genuine friendships</li><li data-section-id="126a5wq" data-start="3051" data-end="3074">Respect differences</li><li data-section-id="15oznhc" data-start="3075" data-end="3129">Develop confidence that doesn’t rely on comparison</li></ul><hr data-start="3131" data-end="3134" /><h3 data-section-id="w8bv5z" data-start="3136" data-end="3171"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3140" data-end="3171">You’re Doing Important Work</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3173" data-end="3301">This is Part 3 of our 7-part series designed to help you recognize subtle behaviors and respond with connection, not correction.</p><p data-start="3303" data-end="3426">Because raising kind, confident girls isn’t about perfection—it’s about <strong data-start="3375" data-end="3425">guidance, awareness, and intentional parenting</strong>.</p><hr data-start="3428" data-end="3431" /><h3 data-section-id="1mxa3un" data-start="3433" data-end="3492"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3437" data-end="3492">Want More Tools to Build Connection and Confidence?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3494" data-end="3672">At <em data-start="3497" data-end="3514">My Crumby World</em>, we’re here to support you with practical tools, meaningful conversations, and activities that help your daughter grow into her best self—without comparison.</p><p data-start="3674" data-end="3795">👉 Follow along for the rest of this series and discover simple ways to build stronger bonds and healthier social skills.</p>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/29/is-your-child-showing-entitlement-how-to-build-empathy-and-true-confidence/">Is Your Child Showing Entitlement? How to Build Empathy and True Confidence</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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		<title>Are “Jokes” Becoming Hurtful? How to Help Your Daughter Choose Kindness Over Laughter at Someone Else’s Expense</title>
		<link>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/21/are-jokes-becoming-hurtful-how-to-help-your-daughter-choose-kindness-over-laughter-at-someone-elses-expense/</link>
					<comments>https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/21/are-jokes-becoming-hurtful-how-to-help-your-daughter-choose-kindness-over-laughter-at-someone-elses-expense/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[mycrumbyworld]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 21:36:21 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Parent Pantry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bullying prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[emotional intellegence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hurtful jokes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kindness in kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[parenting tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[preadolescent girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social skills for kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teaching empathy]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>We all love to hear our kids laugh. But sometimes… that laughter comes at someone else’s expense. In Part 2 of our 7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,” we’re talking about a behavior that can easily be brushed off&#8230;but shouldn’t be: making hurtful jokes. When Humor Crosses the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/21/are-jokes-becoming-hurtful-how-to-help-your-daughter-choose-kindness-over-laughter-at-someone-elses-expense/">Are “Jokes” Becoming Hurtful? How to Help Your Daughter Choose Kindness Over Laughter at Someone Else’s Expense</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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									<p data-start="160" data-end="195">We all love to hear our kids laugh.</p><p data-start="197" data-end="258">But sometimes… that laughter comes at someone else’s expense.</p><p data-start="260" data-end="468">In Part 2 of our <strong data-start="277" data-end="362">7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,”</strong> we’re talking about a behavior that can easily be brushed off&#8230;but shouldn’t be: <strong data-start="443" data-end="468">making hurtful jokes.</strong></p><hr data-start="470" data-end="473" /><h3 data-section-id="jikqhs" data-start="475" data-end="510"><span role="text"><strong data-start="479" data-end="510">When Humor Crosses the Line</strong></span></h3><p data-start="512" data-end="545">Kids often use humor as a way to:</p><ul data-start="546" data-end="602"><li data-section-id="1mg6yb8" data-start="546" data-end="556">Fit in</li><li data-section-id="1swhpwf" data-start="557" data-end="575">Gain attention</li><li data-section-id="1djxb49" data-start="576" data-end="602">Feel accepted by peers</li></ul><p data-start="604" data-end="721">But when jokes are made <em data-start="628" data-end="635">about</em> someone instead of <em data-start="655" data-end="661">with</em> someone, they can quickly turn into something more harmful.</p><p data-start="723" data-end="751">If your daughter frequently:</p><ul data-start="752" data-end="891"><li data-section-id="s84msi" data-start="752" data-end="800">Teases others in a way that embarrasses them</li><li data-section-id="n6mucq" data-start="801" data-end="838">Laughs when someone else is upset</li><li data-section-id="1edwx0p" data-start="839" data-end="891">Says, “I was just joking!” after hurting someone</li></ul><p data-start="893" data-end="926">…it’s worth taking a closer look.</p><p data-start="928" data-end="1032">Because behind those moments is a powerful opportunity to teach empathy, awareness, and true confidence.</p><hr data-start="1034" data-end="1037" /><h3 data-section-id="ud0dns" data-start="1039" data-end="1083"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1043" data-end="1083">What Might Be Driving This Behavior?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="1085" data-end="1149">Before correcting the behavior, it’s important to understand it.</p><p data-start="1151" data-end="1164">Ask yourself:</p><ul data-start="1165" data-end="1306"><li data-section-id="puvqs9" data-start="1165" data-end="1205">Is she trying to gain social status?</li><li data-section-id="1dm7yg7" data-start="1206" data-end="1247">Is she seeking attention or approval?</li><li data-section-id="155kez0" data-start="1248" data-end="1306">Does she feel insecure or unsure of where she fits in?</li></ul><p data-start="1308" data-end="1390">Often, hurtful humor is less about meanness—and more about <strong data-start="1367" data-end="1389">a desire to belong</strong>.</p><hr data-start="1392" data-end="1395" /><h3 data-section-id="mlbkn2" data-start="1397" data-end="1457"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1401" data-end="1457">What To Do (With Rachel Rye’s Heart for Kindness )<img decoding="async" class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-329" src="https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye-150x150.png" alt="Rachel Rye" width="150" height="150" srcset="https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye-150x150.png 150w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye-300x300.png 300w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye-768x768.png 768w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye-600x600.png 600w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye-100x100.png 100w, https://mycrumbyworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Rachel-Rye.png 1000w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></strong></span></h3><p data-start="1459" data-end="1627"><strong data-start="1459" data-end="1490">1. Gently uncover the “why”</strong><br data-start="1490" data-end="1493" />Approach with curiosity, not accusation.<br data-start="1533" data-end="1536" />“I noticed that joke hurt her feelings; what were you hoping would happen when you said it?”</p><p data-start="1629" data-end="1775"> </p><p data-start="1629" data-end="1775"><strong data-start="1629" data-end="1659">2. Help her see the impact</strong><br data-start="1659" data-end="1662" />Kids don’t always connect their words to others’ feelings.<br data-start="1720" data-end="1723" />Ask: “How do you think she felt when that was said?”</p><p data-start="1777" data-end="1968"><strong data-start="1777" data-end="1818">3. Redefine what it means to be funny</strong><br data-start="1818" data-end="1821" />Teach her that humor can bring people together, not tear them down.<br data-start="1887" data-end="1890" />Encourage jokes, stories, and silliness that include others rather than exclude them.</p><p data-start="1970" data-end="2139"><strong data-start="1970" data-end="2003">4. Model compassion in action</strong><br data-start="2003" data-end="2006" />Your behavior sets the tone.<br data-start="2034" data-end="2037" />Speak kindly about others, avoid cutting sarcasm, and show what respect looks like in everyday life.</p><hr data-start="2141" data-end="2144" /><h3 data-section-id="1hhuodp" data-start="2146" data-end="2182"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2150" data-end="2182">Connection Builds Compassion</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2184" data-end="2303">When your daughter feels secure and connected at home, she’s less likely to seek validation through negative behaviors.</p><p data-start="2305" data-end="2334">That’s why this work matters.</p><p data-start="2336" data-end="2431">Because teaching kindness isn’t just about correcting behavior, it’s about <strong data-start="2410" data-end="2430">shaping identity</strong>.</p><hr data-start="2433" data-end="2436" /><h3 data-section-id="7hvuz6" data-start="2438" data-end="2476"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2442" data-end="2476">Why This Matters as Girls Grow</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2478" data-end="2601">As girls approach adolescence, social circles become more complex, and humor can become a tool for inclusion <em data-start="2586" data-end="2590">or</em> exclusion.</p><p data-start="2603" data-end="2668">By addressing hurtful joking early, you’re helping your daughter:</p><ul data-start="2669" data-end="2784"><li data-section-id="lci6ev" data-start="2669" data-end="2710">Build stronger, healthier friendships</li><li data-section-id="13tch6" data-start="2711" data-end="2745">Develop emotional intelligence</li><li data-section-id="r2usrh" data-start="2746" data-end="2784">Become someone who lifts others up</li></ul><p data-start="2786" data-end="2831">And that’s the kind of confidence that lasts.</p><hr data-start="2833" data-end="2836" /><h3 data-section-id="1yw8mm" data-start="2838" data-end="2871"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2842" data-end="2871">You’re in the Right Place</strong></span></h3><p data-start="2873" data-end="3021">This is Part 2 of our 7-part series designed to help parents recognize subtle signs of bullying behaviors and respond with intention and connection.</p><p data-start="3023" data-end="3061">You don’t have to navigate this alone.</p><hr data-start="3063" data-end="3066" /><h3 data-section-id="1nbedko" data-start="3068" data-end="3121"><span role="text"><strong data-start="3072" data-end="3121">Want More Tools to Help Your Daughter Thrive?</strong></span></h3><p data-start="3123" data-end="3311">At <em data-start="3126" data-end="3143">My Crumby World</em>, we’re all about giving parents real, practical ways to build strong connections with their daughters<strong>—&gt;</strong>because connection is the foundation for everything that follows.</p><p data-start="3313" data-end="3459">👉 Follow along for more insights, activities, and tools designed to help your daughter grow into a kind, confident, and compassionate young girl.</p><hr data-start="3461" data-end="3464" /><h3 data-section-id="ktyyzh" data-start="3466" data-end="3485"> </h3>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com/2026/04/21/are-jokes-becoming-hurtful-how-to-help-your-daughter-choose-kindness-over-laughter-at-someone-elses-expense/">Are “Jokes” Becoming Hurtful? How to Help Your Daughter Choose Kindness Over Laughter at Someone Else’s Expense</a> appeared first on <a href="https://mycrumbyworld.com">My Crumby World</a>.</p>
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