Anonymous wrote:Does any teen NOT have ADHD?! Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP said in a follow up that the kid DID know he would lose this trip.
Oh, I didn't see that. I actually still can't find it but if op gave the kid a clear ultimatum and he still didn't do the work, then I'm 100% behind the parents here.
She said he was told weekend plans would be affected and it sounds like there are many weekend plans.
So? OP's kid is aware the ski trip is a weekend plan. It doesn't have to be THAT specific, he's not stupid. I think taking it away is 100% justified and if she gives in now, it's going to send entirely the wrong message. That's a really bad idea and why there are so many bratty kids who think that if they just throw a fit they'll get to go on their trip. It apparently works on many of you!
Don't be that parent, OP. It isn't fun sometimes, but you are doing the hard work to make him a responsible adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's fine that he is missing this night of ski club. However, going forward, I would not have this as a consequence for not doing school work. It is important for kids with ADHD to get exercise and have things that they excel at. Ski club can be both for your son, which will be important for getting him through HS.
As to missing assignments, does your son have an IEP with a case manager? If so, do they have check-ins? If not, then perhaps have a set time once a week to check in with your son on his assignments.
At a certain point, we need to let our kids struggle and even fail. Let them experience the actual consequences of their actions or lack of actions with a lower grade. It won't be the end of the world.
He needs exercise. He does not need spoiled rich brat winter sport with his dude bro friends for exercise. That is a privilege that needs to be earned.
Anonymous wrote:Exercise is good for adhd so I think this was a bad consequence. Don’t cancel exercise
Anonymous wrote:Anyway, today he has his weekly high school ski club Friday night trip. We told him last night that he couldn't go because he has too much missing work. He didn't take us seriously and then this morning when it was time to go to school, he tried to gather all of his ski stuff and go to the car. We said no. This back and forth went on for 10 mins and escalated.
I'm blown away at all the posters on this thread saying OP should have caved. OP didn't dole out this punishment the morning of the trip.
There was an ongoing problem (kid missing assignments).
Kid asked to handle it himself. Apparently failed at that.
OP noted this and enforced consequences *the night before*.
Kid tries to casually ignore her the next morning.
You folks are saying she should have just folded and said ok? Regardless of whether or not you support this type of punishment, prefer positive reinforcement, whatever, inconsistent discipline is a death knell with a teen. If I said no the night before, I'm not re-evaluating as we're getting in the car.
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:Anyway, today he has his weekly high school ski club Friday night trip. We told him last night that he couldn't go because he has too much missing work. He didn't take us seriously and then this morning when it was time to go to school, he tried to gather all of his ski stuff and go to the car. We said no. This back and forth went on for 10 mins and escalated.
I'm blown away at all the posters on this thread saying OP should have caved. OP didn't dole out this punishment the morning of the trip.
There was an ongoing problem (kid missing assignments).
Kid asked to handle it himself. Apparently failed at that.
OP noted this and enforced consequences *the night before*.
Kid tries to casually ignore her the next morning.
You folks are saying she should have just folded and said ok? Regardless of whether or not you support this type of punishment, prefer positive reinforcement, whatever, inconsistent discipline is a death knell with a teen. If I said no the night before, I'm not re-evaluating as we're getting in the car.
Anonymous wrote:
We have an appt late in Feb for a new psych/therapist.
Anyway, today he has his weekly high school ski club Friday night trip. We told him last night that he couldn't go because he has too much missing work. He didn't take us seriously and then this morning when it was time to go to school, he tried to gather all of his ski stuff and go to the car. We said no. This back and forth went on for 10 mins and escalated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just wanted to post an update, as the OP. First of all, I really appreciate all of the feedback. Parenting is hard!
I did text him mid-day and told him how much we love him and how we know how smart he is. I said we’re going to make a plan this weekend so we don’t have this issue in the future. He came home from school yesterday and gave me us the silent treatment. Fine. My husband apologized and said it’s never ok to get physical.
By dinner time he was doing work. By 8pm he came down and proudly told us he got four assignments done. By 9pm he was hanging out in the family room with us chit chatting. He did ask if he could see friends Saturday night, so clearly that was motivation to get stuff done tonight. I said we could revisit that Saturday after he completes more work.
No you can’t punish adhd out of a child, but not even opening his backpack all week is not trying, and that’s unacceptable. We have an appt late in Feb for a new psych/therapist.
That is great. Sounds like maybe he doesn't really have adhd and was just lazy and choosing not to do his work. Glad for you all that a consequence works and he is able to choose to focus and be productive and get it all done without issue when he wants to.
Anonymous wrote:Does any teen NOT have ADHD?! Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:Did taking away the trip cure his ADHD? What if he's just not an academic?