These are trolls. Please ignore their mean-spirited comments. |
This is what you do when the kid is 12 not 20. |
| lol. I’m 45 and I do this with my mom whenever she visits me. She’s essentially helping me cook and plan meals for my family. So thankful I have a supportive mom even in her 70s |
Some of you weren’t loved enough as children and it shows. |
Yeah, are you seriously treating your kids this way? I am all for independence but helping him with ideas is great. Plus, kids like junk food. My kid will pack himself a healthy meal if it’s stocked etc. Itherwise, he will just throw a bunch of random bags in and call it a day. Not what I would want, especially if he’s then training at 6am. |
Good for you, OP. Those PPs posting about "independence" and "problem solving" probably don't even have teens. They have 2nd graders and think they know how all about how teens are supposed to be raised. Or, sadly, they have a pot-smoking college dropout or two living in their basement, and they are creating an online persona to pretend how they would do things differently. |
That’s a fair approach, and I think prompting independence makes sense in some situations. I just see value in helping when they ask, especially if it’s about something practical like food planning. To me, being supportive and collaborative doesn’t take away from building their problem-solving skills, it models it. |