Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:A friend and I this evening were discussing our 14yos and chores. She claims that she’s just happy her kid does the chore, even if they do it incorrectly. She says they are learning responsibility and she can always go back and fix things to her liking (her example was putting things like measuring cups and plastic ware back in an unorganized way, vs neatly.)
My stance is they should do it over themselves if it’s not correct—when they have a job, which household chores are for now—they will have to do their job in a certain way that meets expectations. So in my house, they would be coming back and nesting the measuring cups so they don’t run all over when the cabinet is opened.
Thoughts? Am I too hard? Is she too soft? Is there a middle ground?
If your kid can do it correctly they should. I don’t harp on small details but if they threw the plastic ware in a cabinet and slammed the door shut so everything fell out as soon as it was opened, I would definitely point it out and have them fix it. If a single fork ended up in the wrong spot in the silverware drawer I’d fix it myself.
Similar here. My kids have ADHD which makes me try to pick my battles carefully since statistically they are hearing so much more than neurotypical kids about how they aren't doing things right, at home, at school, with friends...
If it impacts me, like everything falls out or I can't access what I need because everything is shoved into the cabinet, I will correct. If it's close to correct but not the most aesthetic, I try to let it go. I also try to work on technique more in the summer and on weekends when they're home more and have fewer demands than in the school year when they have a lot of homework, sports, and clubs.