When did you REALIZE your CHILD was EVIL? - Reddit Podcast

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Пікірлер: 77

  • @amithegenius
    @amithegenius6 ай бұрын

    😈 FINISH LISTENING TO ALL THE STORIES HERE ▶ kzread.info/head/PL5FcevqxOz5tuU1qghkOUcBqGKHKXHO0f 📮 SUBMIT YOUR OWN STORIES HERE ▶ amithejerk.com/submit

  • @lejardine
    @lejardine5 ай бұрын

    When I was 6 there was a kid in my class named Cory. For whatever reason he took a liking to bullying me. His antics escalated fast. Went from just making fun of me, which honestly i didn't pick up on because I wasn't paying attention to him (like I inadvertently ignored his existence). The final bit was him pushing me in front of a moving car. The driver had good breaks and was a few inches from hitting me. He pulled his car over, got out the check on me and dragged us both in the school and told the principal what happened. The kid had no remorse and his dad (who was like a foot shorter than my mother) tried to pick a fight with her because his son was expelled. Apple didn't fall far

  • @AudreannaMcGrew-cp7ey

    @AudreannaMcGrew-cp7ey

    5 ай бұрын

    Omg 😱

  • @airconditionedBreeze

    @airconditionedBreeze

    Ай бұрын

    You should get therapy for that honestly

  • @lejardine

    @lejardine

    Ай бұрын

    @@airconditionedBreeze I did. All good

  • @airconditionedBreeze

    @airconditionedBreeze

    Ай бұрын

    @@lejardine Thank goodness

  • @dragonriderabens9761
    @dragonriderabens97615 ай бұрын

    story 11 sounds like this kid watches WAAAAAAAAAAAAAY too much YT "prank" channels and has started to emulate it

  • @mirzam.4976

    @mirzam.4976

    5 ай бұрын

    Yea, he will become like that kid that entered people houses.

  • @Lightfyre281
    @Lightfyre2815 ай бұрын

    My ex was an only child, his parents wanted multiple kids but only got one, so he was very spoiled. His parents were really nice people, but they were too nice. They never put their foot down or said no to their son, so he grew up to be a manipulative narcissist. He was so used to getting what he wanted that he didn't take "no" for answer, he'd just bully and manipulate me until I gave in to his demands. I eventually realized he was a monster and cut contact with him. Haven't talked to him or his parents in many years, but I hope his parents eventually realize what a POS he is and make him get some therapy.

  • @shadowmaster335

    @shadowmaster335

    5 ай бұрын

    if he is a master manipulator, then i seriously doubt it, unless he ends up murdering someone in cold blood, or something equally as messed up

  • @shadowmaster335
    @shadowmaster3355 ай бұрын

    story 5, finally someone who isn't fit to be a parent getting forced to be sterile, ngl, that should be a mandatory punishment for child abandonment, and if severe enough, child neglect aswell

  • @desensitizedanalyser5624

    @desensitizedanalyser5624

    5 ай бұрын

    Does it have to be in a painful manner?

  • @user-wf2bj2ub9x
    @user-wf2bj2ub9x5 ай бұрын

    My mom had a hysterectomy when I was 7 my 13 year old sister told me "mommy went to the hospital to die". She also abused me and made a game out of it.

  • @dutchvanderbilt9969
    @dutchvanderbilt99695 ай бұрын

    I remember catching my aunt saying to my grandmother her mother "if something happens don't call me because I'm not going to come and help you" And maybe a few months later I was visiting Grandma and we were shooting the breeze and we got onto the subject of the aforementioned aunt. She told me "I don't know what I did for her to turn out the way she did" and all I could do was shrug

  • @kavinaderrow3269
    @kavinaderrow32695 ай бұрын

    19: Same, but my brother is 16. Since my mom doesn't have a backbone, she refuses to go through with any punishment. My dad is in a care facility for veterans with disabilities/dementia, and is in the latter half of the disease, so he doesn't understand that my brother is an awful person. He's stolen thousands of dollars, lied, and manipulated.

  • @proudatheist2042

    @proudatheist2042

    5 ай бұрын

    I am profoundly sorry that you, a d your family, are going through all of this. Do you have a support system to lean on? Does your father have legal protection to keep his assets safe from your stealing brother?

  • @kavinaderrow3269

    @kavinaderrow3269

    5 ай бұрын

    @@proudatheist2042 Yes and yes.

  • @endersdragon34
    @endersdragon345 ай бұрын

    I am autistic and have worked with others with autism in the past (still technically do but in a much different context). I remember sometimes having to tell parents that no, your kid isn't just hungry, and no it isn't just his autism. Sometimes autistic kids can misbehave just like all kids and if you keep letting him get away with it he's going to keep doing it. Sometimes it is the autism, sometimes its not, you need to know the difference because if I can tell you can too.

  • @iononcantomascrivo

    @iononcantomascrivo

    5 ай бұрын

    Agreed. There was a lady I used to know, who I will call sally. She had two children. One of them was a daughter, who was seven years older from her first marriage, we'll call her Hannah. The one from her second marriage, a son we’ll call Matt. As soon as that was born, Hannah ended up becoming a background figure in the family. She only ever ranked on Sally's radar When Sally wanted a break from Matt. Yep. Sally parentified her own daughter because Matt was a high-energy, poorly behaved, ill-mannered demon spawn. This kid was the product of non-existent to inconsistent discipline, he had no respect for boundaries, zero regard for the word no being a complete sentence as well as a totally valid response and nothing resembling a sense of accountability. In other words, Matt was quickly growing up to be just like his own mother. Buy age four, he was already a holy terror. By the time he was a pre-teen, he was an absolute nightmare. By the time he reached his teen years, he believed he was bulletproof and was a monster. Where was Sally and all of this? Making excuses for him, denying there was a problem, blaming others, conniving, lying, justifying everything, rationalizing and putting her blinders on that her son was quickly turning into a butthole adult. I warned her for years, that she was doing her son a great disservice by not establishing clear boundaries or showing him that there are consequences to his actions. She was a fan of gentle parenting to the point that it was a hands-off approach and only ever got involved when there was a problem. Naturally, because I'm male, single and child-free by choice, she disqualified everything I had to say by saying I “didn't know” what I was talking about. I mean, I didn't know common sense escapes people who don't have children, but that was Sally's logic. Well, her inaction to address her son's escalating horrible behavior finally come back to slap her in the face. Literally. Apparently he had been suspended from school and Matt, being a good head taller than her, and about as muscular as a grown adult, slapped her to the floor and left the house after she grounded him. She called me up flipping out and I couldn't help but chuckle at her theatrics. She was always doing things to get my or someone else's attention. She couldn't believe that I would laugh at her. Then she insulted me and I got angry. I told her that she did it to herself by not raising him right and to have fun with the monster she had created. I hung up on her. After a few abusive private messages and text messages, she took to social media to try to get sympathy from everyone by pulling the single mom card (she wasn't single and had a husband who worked on the road to provide for her unemployed behind as well as their son and his stepdaughter), while ranting unintelligibly about no one knew “how hard” it was being a mom except for other mothers and that she was getting ready to cut ties with some “child haters.” Because Sally's Karen tendencies and her son's absolutely nightmarish behavior preceded both of them, she did not get near the sympathetic reaction she was looking for. She was clobbered in the comments section and even her own mother-in-law chimed in sharing the spare the rod, spoil the child Bible verse. The status suspiciously disappeared only to be replaced by another one where Sally claimed she'd be leaving social media for a while because it was “too toxic.” Unsurprisingly, she didn't get the sympathetic reaction she was looking for and chose to stay on. I mean, where else is a narcissist with an extremely fragile Texas-sized ego going to get an endless supply of attention? I cut contact with Sally a decade ago and was able to finally wake up a mutual friend to what a parasitic toxic waste of space she is. He told me, that right before he ended their friendship which was right before last Christmas, unsurprisingly, that Matt is now an overgrown man-child, with no respect, no dignity, no job, a huge inflated ego and a sense of self who expects the entire world to bend over backwards for him and cater to his every whim. In other words, he grew up to be just like his mother.

  • @Skoopyghost

    @Skoopyghost

    7 күн бұрын

    I have substance abuse issues. I'd like to point out that substance abuse can make you look like a sociopath. A lot of the time it looks like conduct disorder before they go into drugs/alcohol.

  • @tamekaphillips9997
    @tamekaphillips99975 ай бұрын

    So he caught one brother being “inappropriate” with the younger brother but you don’t call the cops?!

  • @alyssamorgan747
    @alyssamorgan7475 ай бұрын

    It's best, when the kid is young, to instill proper behavior and manners through strict discipline. You'd be surprised by how well it works.

  • @RenTheWren

    @RenTheWren

    5 ай бұрын

    It's VERY important to define strict discipline here. Parenting is a tightrope between allowing your kid to experiment with independent decision making, and making sure they know right from wrong. Strict discipline tends to lean too much to one side and leads to the child feeling unsafe with one's parents and resenting them. Age appropriate routines? Yes. A clear framework of unacceptable behaviour and consequences? Yes. Breaking the child's trust or privacy, or refusing to distinguish between honest and wilful mistakes? Absolutely not. The amount of times abusers have used the word discipline to justify their abuse is shockingly vast. The matter is complicated and the meaning of individual words can be stretched immensely.

  • @CatsOverBrats
    @CatsOverBrats5 ай бұрын

    Me and my cousin were both born in 1981 so we often were placed in a room to play together. I remember seeing his anger from age 5. He would smash things and then have a blackout where he couldn't remember he had done it and then accuse me. Then he moved on to killing animals. Then to beating up girlfriend. Then came all the breaking and entering and even trying to run over a neighbor with his car. He kept getting worse and worse. He was in the news paper the other day. This time caught blowing a hole in the wall of a bike shop and stealing 18 electric bikes. Back to jail with him. His parents always blamed everyone else when we were growing up. It wasn't him, or someone forced him, or his girlfriend brought the devil out in him so it was her fault that he beat her. Yeah, they weren't helping at all. I don't know if he could have ever been helped but they didn't even try.

  • @bearhugzfam649
    @bearhugzfam6495 ай бұрын

    TW for violence including sexual violence, CSA, etc. The moment I've seen - kid was 14. Has been abusive to other kids since he was 6. Not just bullying, but sexual stuff, explicit and detailed threats of violence against parents and pets, things like that. Threatened to stab a pregnant teacher in the stomach to kill her baby any time she disciplined him. Used violence manipulatively and casually as though it was no different from turning a tap on and off to get water. At 8 he went to live with his paternal family because he kept trying to kill his baby sister. At 12 he was stopped from spending time with said sister without *strict* supervision after he was caught trying to touch her inappropriately. Obviously throughout this entire time he was in therapy and the family were trying to figure out why he was behaving this way, but the therapists all said the same thing - there was absolutely nothing to suggest it was part of a mental illness or that it was learned behaviour through any kind of sexual trauma or abuse, and they could actually pinpoint the very innocent origin to the sexual part of his violence. Their professional stance was simply that that's how he wanted to be. 99% of the time he was a perfectly nice person, socially aware, compassionate, etc. etc. but it was like he had no emotional attachment to his actions, whether those actions were giving a homeless man his sandwich or threatening to kill a girl's dog because she wouldn't take her clothes off for him. Still, when he was 12 and caught trying to touch his 4 year old sister, the therapy ramped up, family worked with him more intensively, it was basically 2 years of what looked like real progress. He would speak openly about his behaviour and struggles, engage with therapists and family work, showed apparent remorse, all the good things you look at for someone learning and growing. Then when he was 14 he saw an opportunity to lure and SA an 8 year old neighbour girl and took it. The next day during the fallout, it came to light that he'd actually violently SA'ed his sister a few weeks before he was caught trying to touch her, and just hadn't said anything for the 2 years of 'progress' and intensive work. When he was confronted about it he casually admitted to his attack on his sister like he'd been asked if he'd put the laundry on, like it was absolutely nothing. No defensiveness, no masking, no anger or fear at being caught... it just didn't occur to him that this was something he should be ashamed of. He showed every indication of understanding what he'd done and what was wrong with it, it just didn't connect in his head as something to care about.

  • @TheRockinDonkey

    @TheRockinDonkey

    5 ай бұрын

    There’s no hope for people like that. Animals are put down for less.

  • @Alejandro-eq7xq

    @Alejandro-eq7xq

    2 ай бұрын

    Textbook psychopath. The only way to describe it.

  • @TLSoulDude
    @TLSoulDude5 ай бұрын

    Story 19: Oh look, its the Trolls meme. "How was school today?" "STOP ATTACKING ME!"

  • @lillybilly9954
    @lillybilly99545 ай бұрын

    Regardless of how you raise your children, they have their own minds. And they have more than just you to shape them.

  • @sarahlyons2740
    @sarahlyons27405 ай бұрын

    Story 19 - the boy in question may be autistic or have ADHD, some of the things he does sound like they may fit one or both of these issues. Also he is only 18, the brain doesn’t fully mature until you’re 25 so there is still hope. Your poor mother, I really feel for her but even if the above is true he may also be just a bad and selfish person.

  • @18videowatcher41
    @18videowatcher415 ай бұрын

    For story 3, I was expecting to find out that the kid was selling his lunch since it was so fantastic.

  • @philipjohnston5822

    @philipjohnston5822

    5 ай бұрын

    I was fooled into thinking the brother was giving his food away....😢

  • @SevenGC89
    @SevenGC894 ай бұрын

    I've said it once and I'll say it again, sociopaths that don't turn into serial killers become Lawyers, change my mind.

  • @frozenheart7133
    @frozenheart71335 ай бұрын

    When he couldnt stop laughing after hed been presented with evidence that his bullying had lead to the inpatient treatment of a classmate. We thought it would tap his empathy, instead it gave him the thrill of a lifetime. 😢

  • @Drakontwilight
    @Drakontwilight5 ай бұрын

    Had 2 relatives that murdered a cat at age 8 and laughed about it, 30 years later one is in the national guard married with 4 kids the other has stabbed many ppl over the years slashed tires, broken window, put ppls info on bathroom wall saying call for a good time, been to jail and on probation many times yet still does not get big boy time also we are poor so no pay offs or connections just they get away with everything.

  • @FlyerHigher
    @FlyerHigher5 ай бұрын

    0:47 …she nearly ended up in prison- did some community service…” where is this magical place where community service is the alternative to prison?

  • @endersdragon34

    @endersdragon34

    5 ай бұрын

    America if you are rich.

  • @animetalk8132
    @animetalk81325 ай бұрын

    S24 I'll still call that doesn't sound like a good threat

  • @lhproductions61
    @lhproductions615 ай бұрын

    My nephew is going to be 10, not sure if call him a butthole. More so stress and pressure. He watches prank KZread at his dads on the weekends and then comes home acting like a little tool, rolling his eyes refusing to do anything anyone tells him, even if it’s silly shit”go was your hands dinner is ready” “no they’re clean” There’s only a few people who are immune to that who he behaves for. My partner and I, and his maternal grandparents. I guess there’s just something about all of us 🤷🏻‍♂️ kids are weird but if they are that shithead predisposition 😂

  • @KT-4.
    @KT-4.5 ай бұрын

    I hate how i was mean because my buddies encouraged it, but im only mean to my buddies. I'm usually a very empathetic person who gets messed with frequently, i struggle with comprehending things so its always been an issue for me. I started apologizing after it every time, i feel like people will legitimatly be concerned if i stop acting like this.

  • @savosavic1222
    @savosavic12225 ай бұрын

    12:02 and they say that yelling isnt part of good paranting

  • @condorboss3339

    @condorboss3339

    5 ай бұрын

    I think that only worked because she wanted her dad's approval.

  • @savosavic1222

    @savosavic1222

    5 ай бұрын

    @@condorboss3339 seriously calling someone out on their bullshit and u only thik about apruval in a sense it isn't about apruval parents are trying to teach u how to live when u grow up and do u think that if her dad sat down and went on a rant/explanation on how her behavior is bad. Do u think she would listen?

  • @maniacalworm
    @maniacalworm5 ай бұрын

    i feel like if they're only three or younger, we really shouldn't be calling them evil. they have no reference to evil. getting water poured on your pants is unpleasant, sure, but it's not gonna ruin your life.

  • @SSFighter1701
    @SSFighter17015 ай бұрын

    “Then uploaded it to Vine and Twitter” how far are they going back to scrape up these stories?

  • @LexusMercedesRollsRoyceLover
    @LexusMercedesRollsRoyceLover5 ай бұрын

    The sister of the OP in Story #5 was quite eerily like Diane Downs.

  • @raerose2278
    @raerose22785 ай бұрын

    Happy New Year AITG fam! 🥳🥂🍾🎉🎊 Here’s to listening to AITG more in 2024! 🥂

  • @kingsnakebro

    @kingsnakebro

    5 ай бұрын

    Merry new year man

  • @limora74
    @limora745 ай бұрын

    Story 8: if you see this, take your step son to a psychologist specializing in personality disorders. Specifically BPD. Your step son will need Dialectical Behavioral therapy either way and probably EMDR after a few other types of therapy. Most of the kids on here sound like people with personality disorders, not all but many.

  • @raunjisto2925
    @raunjisto29255 ай бұрын

    I’m genuinely concerned about the kids in story #25

  • @roarkkariyama
    @roarkkariyama5 ай бұрын

    Story #3 reminded me of the guy on Dr Phil that did Hobo Fights

  • @jakevex4198
    @jakevex41985 ай бұрын

    Story 10 I've actually started noticing a pattern with these kind of people and it reminds me of Aphrodite and Hephaestus I call it the Aphrodite syndrome

  • @ShindorfMaybelle
    @ShindorfMaybelle5 ай бұрын

    I hope the coffee op had cameras in the shop to try and get Karen banned from the store

  • @ColtDaBolt85
    @ColtDaBolt855 ай бұрын

    AT LEAST ONCE A DAY I GET A VIDEO THAT HAS A REFRENCE TO THE HUNGER GAMES. THAT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH IT. also just relized a had cap locks on

  • @animaniac181
    @animaniac1815 ай бұрын

    YOOOOO!!!! Story 11 is where I live lol

  • @destmichael
    @destmichael5 ай бұрын

    I'm gonna go hug my perfect little 11year old girl.

  • @Dewald
    @Dewald5 ай бұрын

    20:39 Hold up. What is a horse mask?

  • @TempleRunLegend
    @TempleRunLegend5 ай бұрын

    1:45 😂😂😂

  • @arthurmorgan9665
    @arthurmorgan96655 ай бұрын

    I really hope the story about the kid with Asperger's is just a joke because if not i will punt the parent. He's just casually an asshole?!? If the kid intentionally did it i'd understand but wtf.

  • @rogergabbert7434
    @rogergabbert74345 ай бұрын

    7:52 shit that isn’t the half of it.

  • @rileighdabbs1950
    @rileighdabbs19505 ай бұрын

    Story 19 is pretty much my third oldest brother.

  • @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga
    @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga5 ай бұрын

    3:50 *Psychopath She’s hiding it somewhat, right?

  • @ethanmcrae1665
    @ethanmcrae16655 ай бұрын

    A lot of these kids just seem to need to learn that actions have consequences. I don't normally advocate hitting kids but...

  • @Azulakayes

    @Azulakayes

    5 ай бұрын

    You can give consequences that don't involve physical violence. I firmly believe that hitting kids is lazy parenting.

  • @Plexiux

    @Plexiux

    5 ай бұрын

    "Have you tried beating his ass?" -Grandad, Boondocks.

  • @ethanmcrae1665

    @ethanmcrae1665

    5 ай бұрын

    @Azulakayes I don't necessarily disagree. I would also submit that these people have been let down by bad parenting most of their lives. As much as a slow structured approach of bit by bit bringing them to understand that thier actions effect others, and simultaneously instilling a sense of empathy in them so that the person can understand that when they treat others poorly there are negative ramifications appeals to me for being the kinder option, any animal can learn the lesson that if they piss off something enough they may get hurt in return. They became the way they were because they were protected from the consequences. If a child mis-behaves, do you not spank them?

  • @n1h1l.
    @n1h1l.5 ай бұрын

    Muzan sama

  • @H3n7yx76
    @H3n7yx765 ай бұрын

    A

  • @ryanp259

    @ryanp259

    5 ай бұрын

    B

  • @Niceboi
    @Niceboi5 ай бұрын

    You know if my parents are watching this video they'd be like "why don't you just dope your kids up on a bunch of medicine to correct their behavior" because that's what they did with me. (Prescription medicine).

  • @kitkakitteh

    @kitkakitteh

    5 ай бұрын

    Maybe you needed it. Crazy people seldom realize they’re crazy.

  • @arielpeterson3175
    @arielpeterson31755 ай бұрын

    Not my kid but my 14 yo brother makes jokes all the time about how he's going to k*ll my 8yo sister and mom we have a system in place for my mom to text me that means get to her house grab my sister and book it to my other younger sisters(28) house 18 miles away

  • @FlyerHigher
    @FlyerHigher5 ай бұрын

    👇evil kid count…