Dude, it wasn't "school books" it was teen boy stuff. He comes into the house and leaves a trail of items in his wake including actual garbage. I'm fine with picking up an item here or there for him, but I would have to follow him around and be his personal valet or have the house be his personal garbage can if I didn't insist that he pick up things sometimes. My point was, if I say nicely, "Hey could you please pick this stuff up (at some point today)." He'll agree and then just not do it. Rinse repeat. And each time, I have to think about it, remember to remind him, negotiate with him etc. It's exhausting. I'm not in any way OCD btw. |
OP- I responded earlier that I think your son is engaging in oppositional behavior. It's more typical to test boundaries, assert independence, etc. It's another matter for him to argue over small things on a constant basis to the point where it disrupts your household or attempt to mess up your day by refusing to comply with a reasonable demand. Here is a short article on it. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/liking-the-child-you-love/201706/does-your-child-or-teen-have-oppositional-defiant-behavior If this describes your son, you need to tread carefully and get some therapy for him. A lot of these strategies here won't work because it's often embedded behavior (either neurological or hardwired through habit). Going toe-to-toe on something like this will escalate badly. I have a son with ADHD (younger) who can be defiant. When I start with authoritarian methods out of sheer frustration (as recommended in some of these posts) it goes sideways. A good therapist can give you strategies for dealing with this behavior. It's a very methodical approach. |
And your posts are a fine example of stupid conflation of authority and authoritarianism. |
I don't think there's any acceptable way to get a teen with a strong will to "obey." You have to hope that your strong-willed kid develops values and goals that are acceptable to you by the tween years or you're lost. Maybe you can bully an older kid into doing what you say, and any parent may have to nag to get a kid to live up to the kid's own standards. But the only peaceful way to get action is to remind the kid to meet the kid's own standards, or, possibly, the standards of an outside mentor or idol. The only way the parents' standards matter at that point is if they're already built somewhere into the kid. |
If you've already taken away the only thing he cares about, you have no other leverage and he's probably relieved he doesn't have to do what you tell him anymore. I would check out the info about defiance and maybe going to counseling to figure out next steps. |
| OP, did you make any progress? I found your thread when doing my own search for my teen son's nehavior. He also is disobedient, oppositional, argumentative, talks back, insults us, makes fun of us, constantly annoys siblings, will not bring books home to study, lies directly to our faces, will not clean room or do anything to help around the house. Will not hang clothes up or put them away, has garbage in his room, etc. Doesn't care about school or grades. I actually do wonder if he is a sociopath sometimes. |
| First, I would remove the word “obey” from your vocabulary. He’s a teen, not a subject. |
Totally agree. I just did this. It was a very revealing two hour conversation. Really listen, empathize don’t over react. These years are hard- I’m sure you remember being a teen. |
| Where is his dad in all of this? |
I don't think you understand the meaning of obeying. I am an adult in my 40s, but I am obeying my parents and always will. |
I take it you missed that his father died. |
I didn’t see that. I’m sure that’s part of all this- missing Dad or at least the male presence at this time in his life. |
Yes, OP. Say something like: I see that you didn't put away what you asked to borrow. Since I had to put it away, please do not ask for more of my things until you can promise you will put them away when you are done. I do that with my 12 year old who has an oppositional defiant streak. I understand how frustration it is, I have two other kids that do what they need to do when warned and respond to threats of me taking away their things. But my son doesn't. I really want to slap him sometimes (I've never raised a hand to any of my kids, but my son sure does test my limits). But I know that would be completely counter-intuitive. I read tons of books on it and I have had to adjust my speech for him. It has been a life saver because we don't argue any more. I'm done arguing. I just say my blurb, if he doesn't do as asked, there are consequences, period. Even if the consequences are for a month later. |
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OP here. To the poster who wondered if I'd made progress. The answer is: sort of. DS went away to camp for a month this past summer and was very homesick (he was so surprised!) This really helped our relationship. Also, once school stopped, he felt MUCH LESS stressed. We were in a bad cycle of stress, anxiety and power struggle. Once we got out of it- something I think we both wanted, we've been working on new patterns. Sometimes we slide back into old patterns but so far we're making progress in the right direction. I decided that, for the most part, I'm going to try to avoid controlling him. That doesn't feel entirely satisfying because teenagers can be really selfish jerks and I sometimes feel like I'm being a chump. At the same time, I'm trying to guide him/remind him without nagging about things I think are important. And I've done a lot of listening and empathizing. I've really tried to get inside his head and figure out why he was so unhappy and stressed out.
He does not want to go to therapy and I'm not making him, but I am going to therapy to help me deal with some of my feelings that come up around parenting a teen! Anyway, all of this is to say, I don't have any answers, but yes, things are moving toward a better place. |
| not the PP who asked for the update, but thank you for the update, OP. |