Bad Parents Mom

Bad Parents Mom




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TEEN Mom star Jenelle Evans and her husband, David Eason, have been dubbed "bad parents" for letting their kids color on the walls.
Fans were left horrified after David, 33, took to TikTok with a video showing their family home covered in paint, crayon marks and mud by the children.
The ex Teen Mom 2 star went round the house videoing pen and paint marks and small doodles left by the children on the walls, furniture and doors.
The three children, Jace, 11, Kaiser, seven, and Ensley, four, had even ruined their own beds by scribbling all over them in pen.
"Are you like me? Do you have some future artists living in your home?" David could be heard sarcastically asking his fans as he filmed the walls.
He continued: "Not only are they practicing art but they are also practicing finger painting with mud, whatever that is, some of these marks. It's all in good fun.
"But you know what? I think this is the start of something really great. If they can do this, man they can do anything."
"Let me take you round the gallery," David jokingly went on, showing how Kaiser had drawn his name and added lines to artwork in his bedroom.
The former reality TV star also showed off windowsills, door frames and skirting boards that had been defaced with doodles.
Fans quickly headed to the comments to slam the couple for being "bad parents," for allowing the children to be unsupervised and draw on the walls.
"Tell them not to draw on the walls and learn to parent," one woman wrote, to which Jenelle, 29, responded: "We parent just fine."
Another hit out: "This is from unsupervised children," to which the ex MTV star replied: "Sorry I don't stare at my children in their bedrooms 24/7."
"Here's an idea, try actually watching your kids," a third chimed in, while a fourth agreed: "This is so very sad. Save these children."
Others immediately flooded Reddit to share their concern over the "gallery," slamming David and Jenelle for "neglecting" their kids.
"They’re too big to do that. Those kids are being neglected hard core," one user kickstarted the debate, which was joined by hundreds of people.
A second added: "This just shows that the kids are being largely ignored. And he will probably scream at them (or worse) for this."
"I can't stop thinking about this video. His voice is absolutely terrifying. This is truly awful," another said of David's sarcastic tone.
"The tone of this narration is haunting to me. Like someone is going to be severely punished, and it's not who should be watching the children," wrote a fourth person.
It comes after fans expressed their concern for Jenelle and David's children after they spotted her drinking Corona at her desk at 11am.
Fans first spotted drinks appearing in the background when Jenelle was seen sipping on a Corona Lite in an Instagram Live during the day.
Earlier this year, a Reddit user pointed out Jenelle had been drinking a Corona from a can while working on her podcast in the morning.
One person wrote under a screenshot of the alleged drink: "If I was unemployed I'd probably be having Coronas at 11am too."
A second chimed in: "That is so cringe for her. I wonder how many she drinks in a day... So many questions. Does she black out by 11pm?"
A third simply slammed her for "sipping Corona like water" and suggested that she was "addicted to not being sober" in another comment.
In April, the mother of three insisted she is not an alcoholic and only drinks "three beers a week" after fans slammed her for drinking in the afternoon.
After reading an article headline that claimed she has a drinking problem, Jenelle said: "Y'all, if you even knew. When I was younger I drank so much liquor. You can call me an alcoholic when I was younger."
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https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB123958114341312173
Bad Parents and Proud of It: Moms and a Dad Confess
Toddlers as Pushovers, Dogs Doing Cleanup
And Other Tales in the New Tell-All Genre
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When her two young sons first started walking, Lisa Moricoli-Latham, a mother in Pacific Palisades, Calif., would gently push them over. For the sake of their development, she thought it would be better for them to crawl first. A physical therapist had told her so. She kind of enjoyed it, she says. "It gave me this sort of nasty thrill..."
Ms. Moricoli-Latham is featured in a video promoting "True Mom Confessions," a compilation of admissions of imperfect parenting that arrived in bookstores last week. Landing next month are Ayelet Waldman's "Bad Mother: A Chronicle of Maternal Crimes, Minor Calamities and Occasional Moments of Grace" and Michael Lewis's "Home Game: An Accidental Guide to Fatherhood," two memoirs that focus on the parental failings of the authors. In the fall, parenting Web site Babble.com will publish a compilation of essays from its most popular feature: a column called "Bad Parent."
Critiquing other people's parenting has become a sport for many mothers and fathers, aided by the Internet and the sheer volume of available expert advice. Now some parents, hoping to quiet the chorus of opinions, judgments and criticism, are defiantly confessing to their own "bad parenting" moments. They say that sharing their foibles helps relieve the pressure to be a perfect parent -- and pokes fun at a culture where arguments over sleep-training methods and organic baby foods rage on. Critics say it's the latest form of oversharing online -- the equivalent of posting your every move on Twitter or Facebook -- and only reinforces parents' worst habits.
One mother on Babble.com admits to allowing her toddler to watch as much as six hours of TV a day. Another worries she's raising a bigoted baby. A third admits to hating her daughter's friend, who is 3 years old.
The news of the week in context, with Tyler Blint-Welsh.
The publishing genre can also be lucrative. Thanks in part to the "Bad Parent" column, traffic on Babble more than tripled, to 1.8 million visitors a month, over the past year.
Patrick Price, an editor at Simon Spotlight Entertainment -- which last month published "It Sucked and Then I Cried: How I Had a Baby, a Breakdown, and a Much Needed Margarita," the parenting memoir by popular mom blogger Heather Armstrong -- says he has been seeing a steady stream of confessional parenting submissions.
ABC is airing a new sitcom, "In the Motherhood," devoted to the foibles of three harried mothers. It grew out of a Web series that used the accounts of real women who submitted their stories online. In one show, a mother confesses she ran out of diapers and has been using paper towels and tape instead.
In real life, such parental confessions can backfire.
A mother in British Columbia wrote ironically on Twitter earlier this year that she wanted to smother her 3-year-old daughter because she wouldn't go to sleep, and a few hours later, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police showed up at her door. They checked on her child, who was safely tucked in bed, and left. "Maybe I should've put a little smiley face on it or followed it up with 'Just kidding,' " says the woman, who requested anonymity.
The anonymous tell-all site Truu Mom Confessions, on which the book "True Mom Confessions" is based, has compiled more than 500,000 confessions from women in two years. Its founder and the book's author, Romi Lassally, says she started the site after her son threw up and, dreading the cleanup, she confided to a friend that she hoped the dog would eat it. The friend countered with a story of giving her daughter the antihistamine Benadryl so she'd sleep on a plane. Ms. Lassally replied by admitting she'd read her own daughter's diary. "These are moments -- we're not necessarily proud of them but it felt good to share," she says.
"You seek these external affirmations," says Jennifer Baumgardner, a 38-year-old writer in Brooklyn, N.Y. "I think there's kind of a global insecurity about making choices that not everyone is making."
Ms. Baumgardner wrote a Babble column about herself and a friend, both of whom were nursing mothers; she breast-fed her friend's baby once to see what it was like. After the 2007 column ran, she received a flurry of criticism from readers, warning their children would end up in therapy. But Ms. Baumgardner says many readers defended her, including mothers who had done the same thing but kept quiet, fearing the contempt of other parents.
Ms. Waldman's book is partly inspired by the backlash she experienced after her New York Times essay four years ago in which she wrote that she loved her husband, writer Michael Chabon, more than she did their children. She calls her book an attempt to calm the "frenzy of maternal anxiety" among self-critical moms. "It's a step in the right direction to say, 'Yeah, I'm a bad mother, so what?' " says Ms. Waldman, who has four children in Berkeley, Calif. "If we all simply refused to engage and said, 'What we're doing is good enough,' I think we'd all be a lot happier."
As for dads, Mr. Lewis writes in "Home Game" about the "disturbing gap" between how he thought he should feel as a father and the less saintly way he actually felt. His book, based on his columns for the online magazine Slate, describes fathers experiencing a "long unhappy transition" from the casually disengaged style of their own dads to the evolved dads of the future.
Children aren't always prepared for such insight into their parents' private thoughts about the family. Last fall, Iris Morrell read her mother Carole Morrell's blog, "The Drunken Housewife," a darkly funny take on the foibles of child rearing, and learned that her parents were seeing a marriage counselor. "I'm so upset!" the 9-year-old wrote in an email to a friend. She didn't understand why her mother had told readers but didn't mention it to her children.
Since then, according to the mother, Iris's 6-year-old sister, Lola, has started weighing in on how much their mom can share. When she saw recently that her mother was quoting her word for word on the blog, she leaned over to Ms. Morrell's laptop and hit the delete key.
Write to Ellen Gamerman at ellen.gamerman@wsj.com
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