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'You Look Like a Potato': Parents Share the Most Brutally Honest Roasts From Their Kids
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'You Look Like a Potato': Parents Share the Most Brutally Honest Roasts From Their Kids

2 min readSource

A Reddit thread has gone viral with parents sharing the most brutally honest and hilarious things their kids have said, from "your head looks like a potato" to "you are dry and crusty like a pretzel."

The Roast That Started It All

A recent thread on the Toddlers subreddit has gone viral, not for parenting hacks, but for the unintentionally savage comments kids make to their parents. It began when one mother shared that her young daughter told her she is “not pretty” and that she looks “like a man.” The post opened the floodgates, with parents worldwide jumping in to share their own stories of being hilariously humbled by their little ones.

No Filter, No Mercy

The comments reveal a universal truth: children are masters of the unfiltered observation. One parent shared, "My three year old told me my head looked like a potato the other week." They added, "I think it might even have been a compliment because he does really like potatoes."

Body image comments were a recurring theme. "My son likes to slap my belly and say ‘wow it’s so soft and big’," another user wrote. One mother recounted her toddler bringing her a Peppa Pig figurine of Dada Pig and declaring, "looks like mama!" She wondered, "Can’t tell if it’s because she thinks I’m fat, have a beard, wear glasses, or all of the above!"

The roasts weren't limited to parents' bodies. One child's musical critique was particularly sharp. "I was singing him a lullaby," a mom wrote. "He put his finger in my mouth and said ‘off.’" Another parent received some unsolicited skincare advice when her child brought her lotion, saying, "here Mama… you are dry and crusty like a pretzel."

The Innocence Behind the Insult

What makes these comments more funny than hurtful is the complete lack of malice. As one user pointed out, "I don’t think children think it’s ‘bad’ to be not pretty, or not skinny etc. For them, it’s as factual as the day being cold." This innocence allows for moments of connection even after a verbal jab. A mother who was hurt when her 6-year-old called her stomach "ugly" explained that her body changed to grow her and her brothers. The daughter later told her she was "the most beautiful mommy," having understood the context.

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