Anonymous wrote:Yes to a summer job. The more manual the better. Summer jobs offer more than a paycheck. He will learn to show up on time (responsible), check the weekly schedule, do as he is told and deal with customers (the nice ones and the A-holes).
Anonymous wrote:Personally, working a minimum wage retail job as a teenager really impressed upon me the importance of getting a college education and setting myself up for a "successful" career. I didn't want the lives of my store managers who were in their 20s and 30s, dealing with low pay, working nights and weekends while trying to juggle family responsibilities, terrible benefits, and few options for advancement.
Sounds like working might be good for your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a common problem with young men right now. Watch his exposure to video games and chat rooms. Young men are being exposed to a ton of harmful messages about their self-worth and blaming it on others (especially women).
Understand that the messaging and radicalization they’re exposed to is no different than what created ISIS or other terroir organizations.
Frightening! Outside of this, I don't understand why this is happening with boys. Is there a book on this or documentary on television. Andrew Tate?
Anonymous wrote:This is a common problem with young men right now. Watch his exposure to video games and chat rooms. Young men are being exposed to a ton of harmful messages about their self-worth and blaming it on others (especially women).
Understand that the messaging and radicalization they’re exposed to is no different than what created ISIS or other terroir organizations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a common problem with young men right now. Watch his exposure to video games and chat rooms. Young men are being exposed to a ton of harmful messages about their self-worth and blaming it on others (especially women).
Understand that the messaging and radicalization they’re exposed to is no different than what created ISIS or other terroir organizations.
Plenty of those harmful messages are seen here on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, we are affluent but I’ve kept my kids grounded, they have been brought up with faith, family time, service work, friends, fun. They’ve also been exposed to realities of life - sickness, reading about and media news about those less fortunate and the homeless, world situations, etc. They’ve volunteered and gave had summer jobs.
We’re a proactive family about therapy, dealing with every kind of issue- anxiety , depression, learning disabilities. Yet, my son, 16 year old son is a lump on a log.
I ask him what he wants out of life what motivates him- he doesn’t know. I have to ask him specific questions- you like working outside? On computers all day inside? Work with kids? Do you want a hardworking life or a smoother, less stressful life. He’s slug-like with his responses.
I asked him, his therapist asked him- if he’s depressed, he says he’s not. He’s just “out there.” I don’t know what to do; he’s a good kid, no drugs, alcohol, has friends. Do I just accept he’s a flake? I don’t want to send him to college (if he can find one with his grades) to waste his/our time and money to coast an additional 4 years.
If you were like this, when did you wake up? What motivated you? What age? What are you doing now?