mikassyna wrote:
bleh12345 wrote:
This is a normal phrase that is used by parents. It is not meant to be taken literally at all.
Explanation: Said to make children think twice about doing something naughty. It simply means, "If you touch/do this, you will be in trouble."
Hmm. When I grabbed things at the dinner table without asking my father would sometimes grab my hand, pin it down on the table and hold a knife over my fingers and say, "If you do that again, I'll chop off all your fingers."
Just a slight variation on the theme of normal?
There's a difference between saying something wildly off the wall that the kids know is pure hyperbole, and making them think it might actually happen. I see a huge difference in saying something that is meant to be so silly and far from possible that it rounds back to just be a "I really don't want you to get into my coffee, or I am going to be kind of annoyed." Which is what a normal person would mean when saying something like that. (Or think about the way people say, "I'm going to eat you up!" and then blow on the kid's belly with little kids, no one thinks it means they are literally going to eat the child. The absurdity is part of the game.) The very absurdity of the statement is the signal that it is not to be taken seriously. HOWEVER, taking the absurdity out of it--actually using physical force, making the person think it is a real possibility--no that is not normal.
How to tell whether it is an abusive statement from a particular parent? Watch the kid. If they laugh and act like it is a game, then it probably is. (I can't think of something particular right now, but I know I say crazy things like that, and my kids know that I am playing with them and react in a playful manner.) If the kid withdraws and acts scared (because I can't imagine you not acting scared the next time after someone pinned your hand and threatened it with a knife) then it probably isn't a joke and you might be looking at an abusive situation.
The thing is, you can't tell which you are looking at by reading out of context lines on the Internet.