Anonymous wrote:Tonight, your answers are limited.
If you pick the lock and walk in, I bet he won't engage in conversation anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What purpose does taking the door off serve other than win the power play and display your dominance? I don't get it. And then you have a doorless room.
I get this is disrespectful but how will waiting an hour make any difference. Kids this age are disrespectful. Demanding perfect respect -- if you had that then why would you need to have this talk in the first place.
Taking the door off creates a secondary, huge, enormous issue which is going to dwarf the issue you came to talk about in the first place. How could you sit down to talk about, I don't know, a messy room, sneaking out of the house, when your parent had just basically gone on a temper tantrum of their own, completely invaded your privacy, and ruined any trust between you?
They’ll quickly get over the “huge, enormous issue” and realize any “power play” is all in their mind as you, the parent, are the one in charge, period.
Anonymous wrote:Parent wants to talk to DC (17 years old). DC locks bedroom door to keep parent out.
What would you do?
Anonymous wrote:The door comes off!
Anonymous wrote:What purpose does taking the door off serve other than win the power play and display your dominance? I don't get it. And then you have a doorless room.
I get this is disrespectful but how will waiting an hour make any difference. Kids this age are disrespectful. Demanding perfect respect -- if you had that then why would you need to have this talk in the first place.
Taking the door off creates a secondary, huge, enormous issue which is going to dwarf the issue you came to talk about in the first place. How could you sit down to talk about, I don't know, a messy room, sneaking out of the house, when your parent had just basically gone on a temper tantrum of their own, completely invaded your privacy, and ruined any trust between you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The door comes off!
+1