Anonymous wrote:what does a sliding glass door have anything to do with anything?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, if you think your kid is avoiding your house to "avoid accountability," maybe look a little deeper unless your child is dealing with serious issues like addiction.
Not quite addiction, but close to it. Drinking, drugs, no supervision in the house. We're open about it, but do have boundaries. I.e kids must stay the night, 3 drink max. We also don't have the basement with the sliding glass door.
what does a sliding glass door have anything to do with anything?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, if you think your kid is avoiding your house to "avoid accountability," maybe look a little deeper unless your child is dealing with serious issues like addiction.
Not quite addiction, but close to it. Drinking, drugs, no supervision in the house. We're open about it, but do have boundaries. I.e kids must stay the night, 3 drink max. We also don't have the basement with the sliding glass door.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, if you think your kid is avoiding your house to "avoid accountability," maybe look a little deeper unless your child is dealing with serious issues like addiction.
Not quite addiction, but close to it. Drinking, drugs, no supervision in the house. We're open about it, but do have boundaries. I.e kids must stay the night, 3 drink max. We also don't have the basement with the sliding glass door.
Sounds like addiction to me! That's the real problem here. Maybe you should try to do something about it rather than blaming others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, if you think your kid is avoiding your house to "avoid accountability," maybe look a little deeper unless your child is dealing with serious issues like addiction.
Not quite addiction, but close to it. Drinking, drugs, no supervision in the house. We're open about it, but do have boundaries. I.e kids must stay the night, 3 drink max. We also don't have the basement with the sliding glass door.
Anonymous wrote:I agree, if you think your kid is avoiding your house to "avoid accountability," maybe look a little deeper unless your child is dealing with serious issues like addiction.
Anonymous wrote:Split household of 13+ years. DS will be 18 soon. What do expectations for visiting look like at that point? Our household is more strict and I would describe the other household as a set of enablers. They coddle, handhold and continue to stunt independence and reward immaturity. Our worry is that sooner rather than later, this will lead to him avoiding our household to avoid accountability. At least, that's what we would have done as teens.
Thoughts, regrets, experiences?