I agree. Taking away Christmas presents is way to harsh of a punishment for the crime. |
Totally agree with this. |
He needs to learn now that stealing has serious consequences and while I would not take away all presents, I would cancel the other kid coming over and return all of the toys he picked out. |
| You say that these things are under your Christmas tree. Are they wrapped? |
If he were my kid and stole again out of spite, the consequences would be beyond not getting Christmas gifts. |
| OP thinks her child was sneaky enough to steal a toy and stupid enough to put the stolen goods out in plain sight? That doesn't even make sense. |
He may have thought she wouldn't notice the extra item. 9yos aren't exactky criminal masterminds. |
| IF he did, just have him return them himself to the store. It is punishment enough for first offense. |
This! |
Well I hope you took his presents away. This kind of stuff has to be nipped out early! |
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Take him to the store in the second pair of hand cuffs, have him return both, or get the one pair for the friend and none for him.
Maybe you and your husband can find a use for the second pair? Make it a teachable moment. Even if the cashier forgot to ring it up, it shows the right thing by letting them know it was an error. |
| When I was a kid maybe like 7 or so, I took a piece of candy from 7-11. When we got back to the car, my father saw the candy and made me go back into the store apologize and return the candy. I still remember it today and I am almost 50. |
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When I was a kid, I stole a small toy from a convenience store. I'd asked my father for it; he said no, so I stole it and pretended I "found" it in the dirt next to our parked car. I even rubbed it in the dirt to make it look like it had really been lost. it was a total crap toy I didn't even want. A stupid plastic spinning top, of all things. I *still* feel guilty...I have never stolen again.
Kids make mistakes. Maybe he intentionally stole. Maybe he didn't. Either way, give him the benefit of the doubt and ask out of love rather than accuse. Don't take away Christmas gifts; don't be embarrassed if he did steal and do not go out of your way to embarrass him at the store -- he'll hate you for that crap and feel horrible about himself. And, after all kids make mistakes. He's going to be embarrassed and upset if he did steal. If he didn't and you accuse him, he's going to feel even worse. If you publicly humiliate him? Ugh. Just don't shame him. Shaming kids actually makes them act out in other ways or get sneakier. Anyway, sorry... I hope it all turned out well. I hope you'll let us know how it went. |
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Just ask. Maybe two packages were stuck together. Maybe he put some in the cart by mistake. I wouldn't assume the worst. But if he admits to taking them, just have him take it back and apologize. That's punishment enough, IMO, for a first offense.
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I agree about asking before punishing, but don't fall for stupid excuses - putting them in the cart by "mistake"? Seriously? Did they magically fly there? Plus, OP said she only saw one pair on the belt, which means the second one had to come out of the store some other way. I would ask for his version and take him back to the store to apologize. I think taking away the Christmas presents would be too much and would make him bitter instead of repentant, so I would probably avoid that - after all, you wouldn't be thinking about it if it'd happened in June instead of December. I could see taking away the special activity and the toys he picked out, depending on his attitude. |