| This is my 3rd post and sorry about that but I reread the OP and the update and I still can’t figure out what this kid did wrong besides text the girl. And he’s still reading an hour before bed. OP still hasn’t explained why he can’t text the girl. How did he violate the contract? |
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He broke the contract. Take the watch.
You and Mr Husband need to revisit this rules of the watch during that time. |
Stop with the "contract" nonsense. The son never agreed to any contract. He was most likely threatened that you either agree to this or else you're not getting a smart watch! A normal contract is a mutual agreement, which specifies the roles of BOTH parties. This "contract" is nothing else than an intimidation tactic and a manipulation tool. How about a "contract" where you jump out of the window or otherwise I'll take your smart watch?! |
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This was depressing to read. You’re setting yourself up for failure and to have a horrible relationship with your son.
Your rules for the watch are completely unreasonable. I’m curious if you even have a landline in your house? Is he just not allowed to communicate with people, ever? Can you imagine a parent banning child from speaking to friends on the phone when you were a child? Overall, I feel bad for your child. You set an impossible not age appropriate standard, and you’re mad that your teen behaved like a12year old instead of a 5 year old. Now you want to double down and impose draconian consequences for him existing. Ugh. Poor kid. |
| He's too young for it. He doesn't need it and can't use it responsibly. Take it away. |
This is heartbreaking. My daughter is a straight A student in a math magnet and also plays 3 sports and the violin. She has no problem managing her time and regulating herself. Yet, if I told her to only use her tablet from 6-8pm and didn’t follow up, yeah she’d probably be on it at 9pm. This is a very safe and minor way to push boundaries at the middle school age level. This is not a gateway behavior to becoming a homeless meth addict (which is how you’re acting.) I would not take away my child’s ability to communicate with friends unless the friends were actually problematic. As it stands, my daughter’s friends study together and support each other (obviously they talk about other stuff too, but friends who are also interested in school help her stay motivated.) I know for a fact that her swim team friends are integral to helping her stay competitive and focused. You are weaponizing communication. I can say without a doubt that having a support system helps my daughter succeed. You are weaponizing basic communication and blocking your child from creating his own support system. That is incredibly sad. |
And OP still hasn't answered, why can't he talk to a girl? What did he say to the girl? |
| If he has trouble stopping on time, then you push bacmstart time to make up the debt. |
| You should hand him the watch at 4pm and take it back at 6pm. Something like that. It's yours, not his. He borrows your watch. |
What really surprises me is that OP’s child is only 12 but he knows how to read. That is a huge accomplishment! Fewer and fewer 12 year-olds know how to read in 2026. |
That's what would happen at our house. |
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You have a kid who is doing well in school, plays multiple sports, reads and you are worried about two hours of screen time? I would call that a win.
DS is in 8th grade and enjoys watching Youtube and playing video games. He plays a rec sport, does a few after school clubs, is active in Scouts, and participates in academic enrichment of his choice. We have little problem with his playing video games or watching some TV on the few days a week that he has 2 hours at home before bed time. I would be worried if he were to stop doing the other things and only want to play video games or watch TV. It sounds like your kid has a decent balance in his life. |
| He sounds like a great kid and like a typical 12-year-old boy. It doesn’t sound to me like he’s on screens or texting too much. You obviously need to impose whatever consequences you’ve already agreed to, but going forward you need to rethink your contract and how you handle it. |
We remind DS that he can set a timer on Alexa and are amazed if he does that half the time. He is 13. We need to help him remember because we are the parents. Sometimes he does, sometimes he doesn't. As long as he turns it off without grumbling and turning into a jerk, I count it as normal behavior. If it is happening frequently, then we have a conversation. The kid is involved in sports, doing well in schools, and has some other activities. We might not be excited by it because we didn't have these options when we were kids but today, free time translates to video games. My parents didn't have cable so I went to friends houses who did and watched cable there. We stayed out past the street lights coming on breaking our parents time restrictions. None of this is new even if the means of missing parental deadlines and reminders and restrictions. No offense, but this sounds like normal 12 year old behavior and not a crisis. I say this as the parent of an only child who can sometimes over react to events because of limited experiences and not fully understand the spectrum of behaviors out there. |
| Just because it’s a watch, doesn't mean it’s safe. Get your kid a phone with strict parental controls (Bark, Pinwheel, etc) where you are able to read and see everything they do and they can’t delete. They also need to ask permission to add people to their contacts so you know exactly who they are texting. |