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Teen Daughter Outplays Control Freak Mom With Hilariously Evil Revenge For Tracking Her On A Trip
Angry potato with drawn face inside bubble mailer, symbolizing control freak mom revenge mail prank concept.

THE TRUTH ABOUT: Control freak mom revenge mail - Caught on Camera

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Worrying about your kids is normal for any parent. As long as those thoughts and feelings don’t grow into something overbearing, of course. Like, a desire to start secretly tracking them.

In this story, a controlling ex-wife put an AirTag in her daughter’s backpack for a trip with her father.

However, the two of them discovered the device and came up with a funny way to teach the lady a lesson.

To learn more about these situations, Bored Panda also got in touch with Hara Estroff Marano, the editor-at-large of Psychology Today and author of A Nation of Wimps: The High Cost of Invasive Parenting. Don’t miss our conversation!

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    A potato became a conduit of revenge against an overbearing mother

    Image credits: Mindaugas Balčiauskas / Boredpanda (not the actual photo)

    After a dad found an AirTag in his daughter’s backpack

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    Image credits: Yan Krukau / Pexels (not the actual photo)

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    Image credits: crowlexing

    Helicopter parenting stems from parents’ anxiety

    Hara Estroff Marano says that helicopter parenting is all about wanting the best for your child. The parents who do it are just going about it the wrong way. “The parents are not ill-motivated; they just happen to be 100 percent wrong about the way to produce successful adults.”

    “For example, they take all the [child’s free] play out of childhood, believing it is a waste of time,” Marano points out. “In fact, free play builds happy, active children with agile brains, precisely what is needed for the dynamic economy and jobscape we inhabit.”

    “In addition, in the belief that they are smoothing the path to success for their kids, they take all the lumps and bumps out of their lives. That, however, deprives children of the ordinary little challenges of life through which people normally not only learn to cope with life’s vicissitudes but gain the confidence that they can.”

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    Overprotective parents are so because of their own anxiety. “[It] constricts their vision and tightens their grip,” Marano explains. “Parents can’t trust that kids will grow up OK and figure out how to manage by themselves because the parents are anxious about their children.”

    Image credits: Monstera Production / Pexels (not the actual photo)

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    It deprives children of their independence and infantilizes them

    “We are not and have not been living in a culture of optimism for some time, so parents’ concerns about their kids’ future are somewhat understandable,” Marano says. 

    “However, it is always the job of parents to filter the culture for children and prepare them for independence. You do not make children independent by removing challenges from their lives but by allowing children to approach and master them.”

    Marano explains that helicopter parenting infantilizes children. “[It] deprives them of opportunities to learn how to cope with life’s challenges and kills confidence in their ability to cope.”

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    No wonder young people are having more mental health problems. “They have terrible self-esteem and high levels of anxiety and depression,” she adds. “They have an oversized fear of failure because they’ve never been afforded the opportunity to learn that you can mess up and still survive, even thrive.”

    “It is indeed ironic that helicopter parents, who want only the best for their kids, wind up bringing out the worst in them.”

    Image credits: Czapp Árpád / Pexels (not the actual photo)

    AirTags might seem like a godsend for anxious parents, but experts caution against using them to spy on children

    AirTags can be a convenient way to locate lost items. But some parents have been using trackers to keep tabs on their kids, just as the mother in this story did. There’s been a debate going on for the past several years: is it morally wrong to put a tracker on a child, or is it a godsend to anxious parents who worry about their kids getting kidnapped?

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    Parents who put AirTags on their kids defend their decision by saying that to be a parent is to worry constantly about your child’s safety. Strangers, sketchy situations, and children’s bad decisions who knows what can happen to a kid when they’re alone? And AirTags can take some of that pressure off worried parents.

    Yet experts say that it’s not the best strategy to guarantee your child’s safety. Lenore Skenazy, the president of Let Grow, told Fox26 Houston that tracking your child can definitely make them feel uncomfortable. “A kid who’s being watched all the time is not a kid who has a chance to prove to themselves, and to their parents, that they really are responsible. It changes the relationship between you and the child, even subtly.”

    Interestingly, research shows that the world has never been safer for children than it is today. The biggest threat a child faces today is an accident, whether in a car, by drowning, in a fire, or due to something else. The odds of someone abducting a child are equal to getting hit by lightning, as in 2017, one out of every 293,800 minors was a victim of abduction by a stranger.

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    Using AirTags to keep tabs on your kid isn’t foolproof either. AirTags can get stolen, and children can lose them together with their belongings. However, the trackers don’t provide a person’s or an object’s real-time location. A parent can only see their child’s last known location if they choose to use an AirTag.

    The father gave more details about his complicated relationship with his ex in the comments

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    “Revenge is a dish best served au gratin,” many people were quick to craft puns about this harmless but fun revenge story

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    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Writer, Senior Writer

    Read more »

    Rokas is a writer at Bored Panda with a BA in Communication. After working for a sculptor, he fell in love with visual storytelling and enjoys covering everything from TV shows (any Sopranos fans out there?) to photography. Throughout his years in Bored Panda, over 300 million people have read the posts he's written, which is probably more than he could count to.

    Read less »
    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Writer, Senior Writer

    Rokas is a writer at Bored Panda with a BA in Communication. After working for a sculptor, he fell in love with visual storytelling and enjoys covering everything from TV shows (any Sopranos fans out there?) to photography. Throughout his years in Bored Panda, over 300 million people have read the posts he's written, which is probably more than he could count to.

    Ieva Pečiulytė

    Ieva Pečiulytė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    I'm a Visual Editor for Bored Panda. I’m also an analog collage artist. My love for images and experience in layering goes well with both creating collages by hand and working with digital images as an Editor. When I’m not using my kitchen area as an art studio I also do various experiments making my own cosmetics or brewing kombucha. When I’m not at home you would most definitely find me attending a concert or walking my dog.

    Read less »

    Ieva Pečiulytė

    Ieva Pečiulytė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    I'm a Visual Editor for Bored Panda. I’m also an analog collage artist. My love for images and experience in layering goes well with both creating collages by hand and working with digital images as an Editor. When I’m not using my kitchen area as an art studio I also do various experiments making my own cosmetics or brewing kombucha. When I’m not at home you would most definitely find me attending a concert or walking my dog.

    What do you think ?
    Kathy Salm
    Community Member
    2 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Helicopter parent will be cut out of the kid's life and rightly so. You reap what you sow

    Lee Gilliland
    Community Member
    Premium
    2 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    How can you expect your kids to trust you if you don't trust them?

    ThisIsMe
    Community Member
    2 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This made my day! I would gladly accept punishment on behalf of the daughter for laughing as hard as I did :-)

    Load More Comments
    Kathy Salm
    Community Member
    2 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Helicopter parent will be cut out of the kid's life and rightly so. You reap what you sow

    Lee Gilliland
    Community Member
    Premium
    2 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    How can you expect your kids to trust you if you don't trust them?

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    ThisIsMe
    Community Member
    2 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This made my day! I would gladly accept punishment on behalf of the daughter for laughing as hard as I did :-)

    Load More Comments
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