Anonymous wrote:So he had absolutely no activities available to him and he became bored and spiteful. You might want to work with a therapist to come up with ongoing activities that are actually interesting to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry your son is having so many problems and making your life miseable. But a see two very important positive things: he likes baseball and apparently functions well as part of a team and he has friends. To me these indicate that his social skills are good. I am a grandma and raised three kids, 2 of whom were horrible teenagers and did the stuff you described. The are both now successful adults with lovely ( and sometimes mouthy ) children of their own. This may seem like a stange suggestion but you might try one of the good parochial schools that is super focussed on sports and then board him at Prep where there is very good baseball coaching.In the meantime try to let him do what makes him happy. The Catholic schools are firm but less insitutional than MCPS. In one sense the kids are freer and there is much less academic pressure. I would suggest spending more time with him, not less. I know he will complain but take him to sports events. Take a friend of his along and go out to eat and just sit back and listen without comment to their conversation. If you like the outdoors take him camping or fishing with a friend or two even if he says he doesn't want to go. He is scared and angry about something and you need to de-escalate the tension between you. He needs you. Alot of people will now post that I am suggesting rewarding bad behavior. What Im suggesting is just quietly being with your son and trying to enjoy his positive traits.
+1. This brings me back to my unhappy childhood. I simply wanted to be loved and accepted.
He is scared and angry because his parents are threatening to send him away. He is being taught that love is conditional. The child would certainly benefit from therapy. But to me it sounds like his parents need it more.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have a 7th grade DS and reading this is horrifying.
Are there any other adults in his life that really care about him, besides you and your DH? (Please tell me DH is actively involved in all of this.) Not a paid professional, but just people in your life. Do you go to church? What about a youth group leader?
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks for the response. Unfortunately, he is more than a bit uninspired and argumentative.
He is disruptive, disrespectful, fails to listen to anything we say despite taking away nearly every privilege.
Yesterday is a good example. He was supposed to go to detention after school but he didn't go because he said yesterday was like a weekend because of no school.
He went home and after using up his allotted 30 minutes on the computer became bored and frustrated because he is locked out of the tv. He decided to unplug most of the tv's in the house from cable boxes, etc. He re-programmed the thermostats in the house. The a/c was on. He took my medicine for high blood pressure (shocking I know) and hid it. He re-set my ipad after too many failed password entries. He then made 5 bags of microwave popcorn.
And this was just yesterday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry your son is having so many problems and making your life miseable. But a see two very important positive things: he likes baseball and apparently functions well as part of a team and he has friends. To me these indicate that his social skills are good. I am a grandma and raised three kids, 2 of whom were horrible teenagers and did the stuff you described. The are both now successful adults with lovely ( and sometimes mouthy ) children of their own. This may seem like a stange suggestion but you might try one of the good parochial schools that is super focussed on sports and then board him at Prep where there is very good baseball coaching.In the meantime try to let him do what makes him happy. The Catholic schools are firm but less insitutional than MCPS. In one sense the kids are freer and there is much less academic pressure. I would suggest spending more time with him, not less. I know he will complain but take him to sports events. Take a friend of his along and go out to eat and just sit back and listen without comment to their conversation. If you like the outdoors take him camping or fishing with a friend or two even if he says he doesn't want to go. He is scared and angry about something and you need to de-escalate the tension between you. He needs you. Alot of people will now post that I am suggesting rewarding bad behavior. What Im suggesting is just quietly being with your son and trying to enjoy his positive traits.
+1. This brings me back to my unhappy childhood. I simply wanted to be loved and accepted.
He is scared and angry because his parents are threatening to send him away. He is being taught that love is conditional. The child would certainly benefit from therapy. But to me it sounds like his parents need it more.