Anonymous wrote:I think this punishment is completely fine but you need to have warned him and told him that’s what’s it’s going to be. Always be 100 percent clear what the consequence will be and have them repeat it back to you so you know they processed it. And then follow through.
In this situation I would probably let him go on the ski trip, have a full reset when he gets back, air it all out, and come up together with a plan of what you’re going to do. Which means both of you agreeing next week, the ski trip is on the line.
Anonymous wrote:He pushed your husband?! Hell, no.
You did the right thing in theory but tone of voice, previous experience, all that will add up to your kid exploding. But he needs to learn that getting physical is never ok.
But you need family therapy is what it sounds like to me. Have you tried that yet?
Anonymous wrote:I understand the desire to back off and let him try to handle it and then your desire to take away a privilege when he didn’t follow through.
However, did you warn him ahead of time that missing the ski trip would be the consequence if he didn’t turn in assignments? Did you just bring it up last night and then follow thru today with no real opportunity to catch up? It seems a bit harsh if the consequences hadn’t been discussed in advance which may have escalated his response.
Now he knows, so help him catch up this weekend and tell him you’ll be checking again on Thursday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ski trip is weekly for January and February. So this will be one of 7 trips that he'll miss.
He was begging for me to back off a little, and so I needed him to try even if it meant that he failed.
This implies he didn’t try. He isn’t missing ALL assignments, just some. So he’s done 50% of his work. That’s trying.
Anonymous wrote:The ski trip is weekly for January and February. So this will be one of 7 trips that he'll miss.
He was begging for me to back off a little, and so I needed him to try even if it meant that he failed.
Anonymous wrote:This is part of parenting and it is terrible.
I would say that when it has (seldom) gotten ugly or physical there is ALWAYS an apology due in both directions. So it's important to be firm AND recognize that.
It's so difficult when kids are bigger than you, have cars, and the power dynamic needs to remain parent > child.
Anonymous wrote:The ski trip is weekly for January and February. So this will be one of 7 trips that he'll miss.
He was begging for me to back off a little, and so I needed him to try even if it meant that he failed.