Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had gotten a bunch of clothes on sale from this brand my kids like and had them in a box (taped up) in my closet. I was saving it for Christmas. My 9 year old came and found and open the box and took all the clothes into his room. I was so angry. I told him that he gets none of the clothes and gave them to his younger brother (some of them turned out to be too small so it was a better fit for him anyway) but husband told me this was a terrible solution and creates sibling rivalry. I just felt violated that he was in my closet looking for stuff when I’ve told him so many times not to. This is a week after I caught him going into my wallet and taking cash.
Put a lock on your closet. Set boundaries and enforce them.
As far as the clothes....
This is your fault for not hiding them better.
Taking it out on your kid the way you are doing is not good. Your hubby is right, not just about the sibling rivalry.
what complete shite !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had gotten a bunch of clothes on sale from this brand my kids like and had them in a box (taped up) in my closet. I was saving it for Christmas. My 9 year old came and found and open the box and took all the clothes into his room. I was so angry. I told him that he gets none of the clothes and gave them to his younger brother (some of them turned out to be too small so it was a better fit for him anyway) but husband told me this was a terrible solution and creates sibling rivalry. I just felt violated that he was in my closet looking for stuff when I’ve told him so many times not to. This is a week after I caught him going into my wallet and taking cash.
Put a lock on your closet. Set boundaries and enforce them.
As far as the clothes....
This is your fault for not hiding them better.
Taking it out on your kid the way you are doing is not good. Your hubby is right, not just about the sibling rivalry.
Anonymous wrote:Op here, I just want to say I have told him several times not to go into my closet and take things that aren’t his. And this brand was baseball 101 so it wasn’t just clothes but ones the boys are obsessed with (where I live at least) he knew I wasn’t home so went snooping. He should have known better.
Anonymous wrote:I had gotten a bunch of clothes on sale from this brand my kids like and had them in a box (taped up) in my closet. I was saving it for Christmas. My 9 year old came and found and open the box and took all the clothes into his room. I was so angry. I told him that he gets none of the clothes and gave them to his younger brother (some of them turned out to be too small so it was a better fit for him anyway) but husband told me this was a terrible solution and creates sibling rivalry. I just felt violated that he was in my closet looking for stuff when I’ve told him so many times not to. This is a week after I caught him going into my wallet and taking cash.
Anonymous wrote:I would put the clothes back in the box in my closet for Christmas as I had originally intended. I would give them to the kids they would fit when appropriate. I wouldn't let my child's bad behavior dictate how I handled the clothes.
However, the kid who is taking money from your wallet and rooting around in your closet has a problem. I would first sit down with him and have a conversation about WHY he is doing this stuff. What does he even need money for? Why was he in your closet? Is he bored? Looking for attention? Is he angry about something? What? I don't know your kid so I don't know, but kids don't do stuff like that for no reason. He is acting out. Figure out why and then address it.
I would also likely assign extra chores as punishment for stealing, probably helping me with laundry and organizing. But that punishment on its own without actually talking to him and getting to the bottom of this behavior is pointless. You need to figure it out before it escalates further.
Anonymous wrote:I feel you're both unusually impulsive. Your kid is curious, that's fine. But taking stuff that clearly does not belong to him, like cash from your wallet? That's a problem. And you are emotionally out of control. You feel violated? That's a problem. Your feelings are not commensurate at all with the reality of what happened.
Maybe you both have hyperactive ADHD or something but I think the apple doesn't fall far from the tree in that you both need to work on your impulses.
By all means, punish your kid, but not by creating resentment against his brother. Don't do it out of anger and your own inner emotional turmoil. Do it so he can learn for next time. Give him tools to Stop And Think before he acts.