Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would insist on her joining us. 14 is still too young to be allowed to pout off on her separate way.
I tried this and she is doing the "I refuse to go." "I refuse to get in the car." thing. She is very strong willed.
Sorry OP. She isn’t strong willed. That she feels she can say that demonstrates a stunning lack of discipline in your home. You fix that when they are 4, not 14.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When did oldest dd start backing out? That's when the next one can too.
Older DD has to work.
You’re avoiding the question. How old was she when she was allowed to skip the trip for the first time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When did oldest dd start backing out? That's when the next one can too.
Older DD has to work.
Anonymous wrote:Fourteen year old alone while older daughter works and hangs out with her friends. HELL TO THE NO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I'd skip the trip myself and stay home with the teenagers. My DH was forced as a kid on these family road trips every year to see extended family. He found them very monotonous as the years wore on and he grew to dread them. Spending 8+ hours in a car followed by days of sitting silently on a relative's sofa while all the adults talk about their 401k plans. That's pretty much the way my DH described his family "vacation" every year. I can understand why the kids don't want to go. If you don't want to leave your youngest alone, stay home with her.
Thanks for this. I know that family trips can be tedious and the drive is long so I can somewhat understand. We do a lot of kid activities when we visit but there is an age range of kids so not all of the activities are things she would enjoy.
It makes me sad to think of not going and the rest of the family will be disappointed but I have to do what she needs right now.
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I'd skip the trip myself and stay home with the teenagers. My DH was forced as a kid on these family road trips every year to see extended family. He found them very monotonous as the years wore on and he grew to dread them. Spending 8+ hours in a car followed by days of sitting silently on a relative's sofa while all the adults talk about their 401k plans. That's pretty much the way my DH described his family "vacation" every year. I can understand why the kids don't want to go. If you don't want to leave your youngest alone, stay home with her.
Anonymous wrote:She has been very moody lately and possibly depressed.