| Maybe grandparents have Alzheimer’s disease if kids weren’t lying. My grandparents were always complained one of their daughters and son in law were stealing their money from banks and property, assets etc, for many years, and it turned out the daughter and her husband were innocent, and the daughter was the only children actually took care of them daily until the end. I visited my grandparents and my wallet ( with a lot of cash) was missing, it turned out my grandpa wanted to keep it at a secure place for me, but totally forgot about it and told me the contractor stole it. It was embarrassing when we asked the contractor in regard, then found out everything’s in my grandpa’s drawer. |
An elementary schooler doesn't steal because he can't afford a crust of bread, he steals because he has poor impulse control and it's a boundary to test. The one who "opened some drawers just to see" stole the money. As to your 2nd point, OP has no idea if her kids steal from her because she doesn't know what's in their rooms and has an "everything in the house belongs to them anyway" attitude (see: "my kids are rich"). |
I feel like this is one of those things that you don’t know you have to teach a kid until they’ve done it. I’ve never talked to my kids about not opening drawers at other peoples houses. It would never occur to me that that’s something they would do. I’ve talked to them generally about not touching things that aren’t theirs, I guess hopefully they’ll apply that to multiple situations. But they’ve certainly both surprised me with things that they’ve done because they didn’t apply specific lessons in a different context, or because they did something that I never thought of. |
I always have to remind mine to say thank you and please, all that. But they’ve used good judgment on how to act depending on who they are with. They have a very casual grandma and two grandparents who are a little stuffy. They love them all equally but they would never even go into their grandparents bedroom but are fine going into the grandma’s bedroom. They knew how to read a room very early on. |
| Troll post |
I mean it looks like they must be materialistic since they stole cash from a relative even though they seem to be spoiled enough already with gifts and cash. Have you considered the idea that giving kids lots of gifts and cash might lead them to value material wealth above personal integrity? Or that if money comes so easily to them that they now have a need for the excitement or even entitlement that comes with stealing? |
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My brother used to steal like this. Watches and cash. He was never blamed. It was always doddering grandparents or sloppy teachers or me (the sibling) being messy and disorganized. No one wanted to believe that he was stealing from people he knew and right under their noses.
Well, gradually he started to get caught, but my mom always had an excuse for him. The teacher’s watch on her desk looked like it was close to the dress-up area and he didn’t realize, my cash in my Hello Kitty Velcro wallet looked just like his cash, etc. Growing up my parents made fun of me for being a spendthrift, being messy, etc. I wasn’t. When was 25 or so my brother confessed that every time I got birthday money he took it. It became hundreds if not thousands of dollars and he used his “savings” for taking girlfriends out, buying his first used car, etc. I wonder who I would have been if I’d had that $1000 or $1200 along the way during my tween and adolescent years. Instead I felt poor and dumb and flakey. The cash is in the kid’s room, OP. Count out the equivalent amount from the rest of this kid’s stash, return it to the grandparents, and lock everything else down. |
I thought this too!! Rule #1 of any sleepover adult and sibling’s rooms are completely off limits! I don’t allow my kids in the study or in my bedroom without me. I just don’t. So if my parents said this, honestly, I’d worry about their health and state of mind. I’d probably ask more follow up questions about them before I even approached my kids. |
Draw opener is breadcrumbing. |
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I actually think it’s totally plausible kids opened some drawers in the room they were sleeping in out of curiosity and nothing worse. I’m surprised that people are treating this as a cardinal sin or suggesting that it’s evidence they were stealing.
Grandparents may have seen drawers open and assumed something was taken or misremembered or, as others have suggested, early dementia. How old are these ES kids? My young ES kid wouldn’t even really understand a few $100 vs a few $$. |
+100 Someone was nosy and made a bad decision in a split second. I would be having a very clear convo about boundaries and require an apology to the grandparents for snooping where they shouldn’t. Whether or not they address the cash, they need to be held accountable for the part to which they have admitted. And to poster who suggested letting them know you will be checking video security footage, this is exactly how we caught our seasonal caretaker using our home when we were away. We got a notice of unusual energy use from the electric company. I asked him if anyone had been there that he noticed. He said no. So I told him we would check the remote video feed and get back to him if we needed his help identifying a suspect. He copped to using the house immediately. People just aren’t that bright. |
THIS is what you choose to focus on here?! |
| Kid took money when rummaging through grandpa’s drawers. The fact that he has money is irrelevant. It is the thrill of stealing. At mid kid’s middle, a girl who was wealthy stole her friends’ clothes and money at sleepovers until everyone started avoiding her. |
| Get your kids a bank account. And yes they stole the money. |
The kid opening drawers in grandparents house is s a thief. You know this and you need to do something before he steals from someone who will call police |