Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Thank you. I did point out all week what assignments were missing and that his weekend plans were on the line.
I think your last paragraph really resonates with me. I'll give that a thought.
This was me who posted already.
I think a lot of times it feels like we can’t go back on what we said or undo something. That it shows weakness or lack of resolve or in the future the kid won’t listen to anything we say. I have struggled with this. I think sometimes it is okay if we have more time to think and we made a mistake, we are accountable and we go back and fix it. If we do this with openness and transparency, we model that behavior for them and in the end it just makes the relationship stronger and these issues become easier to navigate in the future. Just my 2 cents. Good luck OP.
But sometimes you DO have to hold the line. If the OP was warning him and he was ignoring it, I think it would have been okay for her to talk to him that week and say “I really don’t want you to miss the ski trip, and I feel like that’s where we’re going. I’m willing to bend if you meet me halfway. What is realistic?”
But that has to be before, and so would the solutions. Like “I can make a list of all the missing assignments and get as many done as possible in two hours after dinner tonight” and then you both sit and do that is maybe a path to ski trip but “next week I will turn in everything” is not, because that is the very thing you are trying to help him stop believing/doing in the first place.
Anonymous wrote: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?
We have tried family therapy. He's tried individual therapy. He's had an executive function coach. I'm a teacher and have been putting strategies in place and giving him tools to manage work since he's been in kindergarten. He has refused it all. There has never been a night of homework that I haven't offered my help - he refused it every time. I am in touch with his teachers regularly, his school counselor. At some point, he needs to make some effort, and so when he asked for more independence and for me to lay off, I gave him that chance and he didn't use his time wisely.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like normal teen drama to me. You cannot give an ultimatum then not follow through. He will walk all over you and will constantly challenge boundaries if you do that. He's not going to die because he missed a ski trip.
He has lost self management privileges. If this were my kid I would clear my weekend schedule and sit elbow to elbow with him and start plowing through the overdue work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Thank you. I did point out all week what assignments were missing and that his weekend plans were on the line.
I think your last paragraph really resonates with me. I'll give that a thought.
This was me who posted already.
I think a lot of times it feels like we can’t go back on what we said or undo something. That it shows weakness or lack of resolve or in the future the kid won’t listen to anything we say. I have struggled with this. I think sometimes it is okay if we have more time to think and we made a mistake, we are accountable and we go back and fix it. If we do this with openness and transparency, we model that behavior for them and in the end it just makes the relationship stronger and these issues become easier to navigate in the future. Just my 2 cents. Good luck OP.
But sometimes you DO have to hold the line. If the OP was warning him and he was ignoring it, I think it would have been okay for her to talk to him that week and say “I really don’t want you to miss the ski trip, and I feel like that’s where we’re going. I’m willing to bend if you meet me halfway. What is realistic?”
But that has to be before, and so would the solutions. Like “I can make a list of all the missing assignments and get as many done as possible in two hours after dinner tonight” and then you both sit and do that is maybe a path to ski trip but “next week I will turn in everything” is not, because that is the very thing you are trying to help him stop believing/doing in the first place.
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:Anonymous wrote: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.
Thank you. I did point out all week what assignments were missing and that his weekend plans were on the line.
I think your last paragraph really resonates with me. I'll give that a thought.
This was me who posted already.
I think a lot of times it feels like we can’t go back on what we said or undo something. That it shows weakness or lack of resolve or in the future the kid won’t listen to anything we say. I have struggled with this. I think sometimes it is okay if we have more time to think and we made a mistake, we are accountable and we go back and fix it. If we do this with openness and transparency, we model that behavior for them and in the end it just makes the relationship stronger and these issues become easier to navigate in the future. Just my 2 cents. Good luck OP.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Thank you. I did point out all week what assignments were missing and that his weekend plans were on the line.
I think your last paragraph really resonates with me. I'll give that a thought.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Thank you. I did point out all week what assignments were missing and that his weekend plans were on the line.
I think your last paragraph really resonates with me. I'll give that a thought.