Nice

By mandiballz - 12/01/2010 06:46 - United States

Today, I was saying goodbye to my 5 year-old son before dropping him at my mom's, as I was leaving for two days, and told him I would miss him. He said, "l won't miss you, I never miss you when you are gone." FML
I agree, your life sucks 36 784
You deserved it 4 461

Same thing different taste

Top comments

Pipistrello_fml 0

A) he's a kid. Relax. B) It's actually probably a good thing. This way you won't have to ever break him of a homesickness issue when he's older. C) if he's REALLY intelligent, he might be trying to help YOU to worry less about how he's feeling. D) ignore the idiots who reply like he's a bad kid. They have no idea what they're talking about.

Comments

blinkmeplease182 0

Aw, that's sad. But he is young so he probably doesn't know what he's talking about quite yet. Only unless he is super smart about those things already and really does hate you, which I doubt. Not that your son isn't smart, he's just little. (:

it could be worse...he could have said "because uncle Sal and mommy jump on the bed while you're away"

BeforeTheStorm 0

A lot of kids are like thattt

razorp 0

that's what I used to say lol, and i still say it when I leave the house for college, but I love my mom andshe knows that, just because I don't miss her doesn't mean I don't love her

welll, there's gotta be a reason for him not missing you.

JunoB 0

Of course he misses you. He just said that because he's angry you're going away. So he acts like he doesn't care.

showtimen0w 0

This has been on here before.

actress5698 1

it's just him trying to show you he is a big kid and doesn't need people

eat him?! haha no. hes a child. he doesnt realize that what he says affects people to the extent it does. of course he misses you, thats probably why hes saying he doesnt, to convince himself.

Either he's joking or it sounds like you're a very poor parent. It could just be the fact that your leaving him for a while, but I've seen enough of bad parenting decisions to know that the former is just as likely, if not more so. Anyway, that doesn't matter. You're his parent, so you already committed yourself to the rigors or parenting. Deal with it. If you don't like it, you can always stick him in an orphanage or something. It's not like you have no say in the matter. I'm not trying to be harsh; it's just the obvious (or it should be). This just simply isn't an FML.