Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pay for gas so that’s not an issue. Jobs take precedence. If you want the car, you can take your sibling to work. For social conflicts, they have to work it out or ask to use one of the other cars. We actually have THREE sharing one car this summer and it mostly works out fine. It is sometimes funny to see one of the kids walk out to the driveway and then come back in and say, “where’s the car?” We just laugh and say, “you should have worked that out with your brother/sister!” 😂
So what if that "where's the car" asking kid needed the car to get to their job? Do you take privileges away from the other driver who took the car earlier? Or is it just the first one out of the house gets the car? Sounds like a good way to get teens motivated to wake up early!
DP, but seriously? If you have a job and need the car to get there and back, you let people know your schedule in advance. That’s part of the responsibility of having a job.
Wouldn't it be enough just to post job schedules on a family calendar, and then it is the car-taker's responsibility to check the calendar before leaving with the car?
Good. ness. The point is that this is a problem for the kids to work out and solve (including what works best for them!) not the parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pay for gas so that’s not an issue. Jobs take precedence. If you want the car, you can take your sibling to work. For social conflicts, they have to work it out or ask to use one of the other cars. We actually have THREE sharing one car this summer and it mostly works out fine. It is sometimes funny to see one of the kids walk out to the driveway and then come back in and say, “where’s the car?” We just laugh and say, “you should have worked that out with your brother/sister!” 😂
So what if that "where's the car" asking kid needed the car to get to their job? Do you take privileges away from the other driver who took the car earlier? Or is it just the first one out of the house gets the car? Sounds like a good way to get teens motivated to wake up early!
DP, but seriously? If you have a job and need the car to get there and back, you let people know your schedule in advance. That’s part of the responsibility of having a job.
Wouldn't it be enough just to post job schedules on a family calendar, and then it is the car-taker's responsibility to check the calendar before leaving with the car?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pay for gas so that’s not an issue. Jobs take precedence. If you want the car, you can take your sibling to work. For social conflicts, they have to work it out or ask to use one of the other cars. We actually have THREE sharing one car this summer and it mostly works out fine. It is sometimes funny to see one of the kids walk out to the driveway and then come back in and say, “where’s the car?” We just laugh and say, “you should have worked that out with your brother/sister!” 😂
So what if that "where's the car" asking kid needed the car to get to their job? Do you take privileges away from the other driver who took the car earlier? Or is it just the first one out of the house gets the car? Sounds like a good way to get teens motivated to wake up early!
DP, but seriously? If you have a job and need the car to get there and back, you let people know your schedule in advance. That’s part of the responsibility of having a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pay for gas so that’s not an issue. Jobs take precedence. If you want the car, you can take your sibling to work. For social conflicts, they have to work it out or ask to use one of the other cars. We actually have THREE sharing one car this summer and it mostly works out fine. It is sometimes funny to see one of the kids walk out to the driveway and then come back in and say, “where’s the car?” We just laugh and say, “you should have worked that out with your brother/sister!” 😂
So what if that "where's the car" asking kid needed the car to get to their job? Do you take privileges away from the other driver who took the car earlier? Or is it just the first one out of the house gets the car? Sounds like a good way to get teens motivated to wake up early!
Anonymous wrote:We pay for gas so that’s not an issue. Jobs take precedence. If you want the car, you can take your sibling to work. For social conflicts, they have to work it out or ask to use one of the other cars. We actually have THREE sharing one car this summer and it mostly works out fine. It is sometimes funny to see one of the kids walk out to the driveway and then come back in and say, “where’s the car?” We just laugh and say, “you should have worked that out with your brother/sister!” 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elizabeth and Jessica Wakefield can work it out themselves. If they can’t, the car is taken away.
??
Anonymous wrote:Elizabeth and Jessica Wakefield can work it out themselves. If they can’t, the car is taken away.
Anonymous wrote:Elizabeth and Jessica Wakefield can work it out themselves. If they can’t, the car is taken away.