Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of this stuff you just need to let go. Choose your battles. Snacking is not the hill you want to die on and frankly you’ll never be able to control anyway. It’s not like when they were younger and you had full control over what they eat.
Disagree. It's not necessarily about the snacking. It's about the lack of respect for the work being done to prepare dinner, and the lack of respect for house rules.
Someone spent time and money to prepare the dinner. You don't get to simply ignore that to go eat snack. And if the house rules are no snacks until dinner has been eaten, then those rules need to be respect. DC can discuss the rules, and even respectfully object to the rules, but they still need to follow them.
I think OP said her DS is only 13. Lets not act like this is a college kid home for the summer. This is still a child. One that must respect the rules put forth by the parents.
This is 100% the hill you DO want to die on.
Anonymous wrote:Not so much DD, but 13.5yrs gr.8 DS.
I feel I'm constantly repeating the same things. Here's an example from today:
DS saying he's full from dinner, then eating a bunch of snacks right immediately after dinner. Me: If you're still hungry then you should be eating more dinner, snacks are for lunches, snacks are expensive, snacks are addicting that's why they "hit different" (as he explains it), and on. I'm tired of it. I'm OK with snacks in lunches otherwise I would just stop buying them altogether but it's expensive and not great.
I feel like this happens with so many things. Homework, bedtime, not being on screens before bed, picking dirty laundry up, anything. Like for example he used to leave his soaked used washcloths in a pile in the bathtub or on the counter which DD obviously wasn't keen on. I swear it took like a year and a half to get him to put it in the laundry room (right across from the bathroom).
I just feel frustrated. I over explain, repeat, explain nothing, threaten taking away gaming time, and it's always the same. He's a good kid but basic "rules" seem next to impossible.
Any tips of what has worked for you?
He has had an ed psych evaluation years ago which didn't yield any diagnosis of any sort. He usually gets A's in everything but gym, but it seems to take so long for things to click and him neglecting things is a problem for others (like running out of lunch snacks every week). Dinners are things he likes and there's other "dinner" foods available too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of this stuff you just need to let go. Choose your battles. Snacking is not the hill you want to die on and frankly you’ll never be able to control anyway. It’s not like when they were younger and you had full control over what they eat.
Disagree. It's not necessarily about the snacking. It's about the lack of respect for the work being done to prepare dinner, and the lack of respect for house rules.
Someone spent time and money to prepare the dinner. You don't get to simply ignore that to go eat snack. And if the house rules are no snacks until dinner has been eaten, then those rules need to be respect. DC can discuss the rules, and even respectfully object to the rules, but they still need to follow them.
I think OP said her DS is only 13. Lets not act like this is a college kid home for the summer. This is still a child. One that must respect the rules put forth by the parents.
This is 100% the hill you DO want to die on.
Yeah, not me. This is ridiculously controlling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he’s hungry after dinner he can eat dinner leftovers.
He’s almost 14. You can’t force him to have leftover dinner instead of snacks. Unless you don’t buy them at all or lock them up
Not op. Obviously she can't force him but she can set rules. And then follow through. For me it would mean me hanging in the kitchen in the evening and pointing to the fridge when they try to go for pantry snacks. If she has appropriate respect, it's not going to come down to a fistfight.
Op, it sounds like this kid would benefit from a detailed checklist. What "to do" before screentime. You'll have to be hands on at first, checking to make sure the stuff is done.
Say "I love you too much too keep nagging, but I want things to run more smoothly. Can we come up with a plan?" And brainstorm the checklist together.
Hanging out in the kitchen and guarding the snacks is ultra controlling. You cannot control someone else’s food intake, especially a teens
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of this stuff you just need to let go. Choose your battles. Snacking is not the hill you want to die on and frankly you’ll never be able to control anyway. It’s not like when they were younger and you had full control over what they eat.
Disagree. It's not necessarily about the snacking. It's about the lack of respect for the work being done to prepare dinner, and the lack of respect for house rules.
Someone spent time and money to prepare the dinner. You don't get to simply ignore that to go eat snack. And if the house rules are no snacks until dinner has been eaten, then those rules need to be respect. DC can discuss the rules, and even respectfully object to the rules, but they still need to follow them.
I think OP said her DS is only 13. Lets not act like this is a college kid home for the summer. This is still a child. One that must respect the rules put forth by the parents.
This is 100% the hill you DO want to die on.
Anonymous wrote:If he doesn’t finish his dinner, wrap it up for later.
Anonymous wrote:He sounds like every 13 year old boy I know.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of this stuff you just need to let go. Choose your battles. Snacking is not the hill you want to die on and frankly you’ll never be able to control anyway. It’s not like when they were younger and you had full control over what they eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he’s hungry after dinner he can eat dinner leftovers.
He’s almost 14. You can’t force him to have leftover dinner instead of snacks. Unless you don’t buy them at all or lock them up
Not op. Obviously she can't force him but she can set rules. And then follow through. For me it would mean me hanging in the kitchen in the evening and pointing to the fridge when they try to go for pantry snacks. If she has appropriate respect, it's not going to come down to a fistfight.
Op, it sounds like this kid would benefit from a detailed checklist. What "to do" before screentime. You'll have to be hands on at first, checking to make sure the stuff is done.
Say "I love you too much too keep nagging, but I want things to run more smoothly. Can we come up with a plan?" And brainstorm the checklist together.
Anonymous wrote:I struggle with repeating myself to my DD 11 too OP. It’s so annoying. They’re at an age where they wanna act like they know everything but need reminding on basic tasks constantly. My current issue is washing her face. She showers in the morning so at night is supposed to wash face with face soap ( she has pimples) I literally have to remind her every night. Last night she fell asleep reading so didn’t do it. So tonight I’ll tell her to do it before she reads and she’ll argue about it.
Our issues aren’t with food, but I empathize with the arguing/pushback.
Anonymous wrote:I struggle with repeating myself to my DD 11 too OP. It’s so annoying. They’re at an age where they wanna act like they know everything but need reminding on basic tasks constantly. My current issue is washing her face. She showers in the morning so at night is supposed to wash face with face soap ( she has pimples) I literally have to remind her every night. Last night she fell asleep reading so didn’t do it. So tonight I’ll tell her to do it before she reads and she’ll argue about it.
Our issues aren’t with food, but I empathize with the arguing/pushback.