Everyone parents their children differently, but that has never stopped those mom shamers and sanctimommies from chiming in and giving their own two cents worth when they see a mom doing something they don't approve of. Caitlin Fladager is a mother of two from British Columbia who recently addressed those who are constantly shaming her for how she's raising her son.

Fladager told Good Morning America that she was "just venting" when she wrote the now-viral post directed at those who tell her that she's 'babying' her 4-year-old son.  She begins her post writing, "I’m so tired of being told I “baby” my son. ⁣⁣Ever since I had him, he’s been a momma’s boy. ⁣" Fladager told GMA that her son was a colicky baby so she spent a lot of time holding him and breastfeeding him. The result is that "he's naturally very attached to me. We're very close," she explained.

She went on to write that her son often runs to her when he's hurt, overtired or feeling under the weather, and she wouldn't have it any other way. "I’m constantly told I need to let him “be a man”. Or let him learn he can’t cry. Well, I’m here to tell you, that’s a load of sh*t," she writes. "I am teaching my kids that their feelings are important. That they can cry when they are upset. That they can call on me anytime, and I will come running with arms open. I’m teaching that to both my daughter and son. ⁣"

The mother of two expressed frustration with those who tell her that her son will be "weak" because of the attention she gives him, writing "if tearful little boys were comforted instead of shamed, we wouldn't have so many men struggling to emphasize with emotions."

Her post was met with hundreds of positive comments from her followers commending her for writing how she felt. Fladager also told GMA that she's different with her son than her 6-year-old daughter because she's always been more independent, but she has been sending her son to preschool three days a week so he can learn to be more independent.

Her post definitely resonated with her followers which made Fladager, who has openly admitted to suffering from extreme anxiety, happy to know other parents felt the same way.

"I was happy to learn I'm not alone," she said of all the support for her post. "It makes me feel like I'm going in the right direction."

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