Anonymous wrote:My teen asked me to buy him his own car.
I told him to get a haircut.
He shot back “well, Jesus had long hair!”
I reminded him Jesus walked everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Just kick him out already you’ve been too lenient.
Anonymous wrote:Once he gets a girlfriend, she might help convince him that basic hygiene is important, as well as being "successful" in life. Unless his appearance and attitude prevent him from finding a girl.
Anonymous wrote:I had him evaluated for ADD and autism when he was younger but the testing came back negative, though I do wish I had pushed more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your tone this is not your kids issue.
Sounds like you failed.
Give the kid money for a hair cut if they want it. Why in the world would you make them pay you back? What's wrong with you?
Seriously!
How is kid failing all the time? He failed in HS you say? I think he was failing from k-12 and you did not pay attention. Does he need therapy and a life coach. I
Yes, force your son to care about his appearance. Force your kid to learn a trade. Force him to go to community college and take a few classes at a time. You cannot let him fail because his whole future life will be hard. Do you realize how hard today's world is for kids without proper training and education? What is your desire for this kid? Turn him into a Jan 6er?
Not sure what 1/6 has to do with this, but okay.
Anonymous wrote:My son will be 23 in June and has had multiple launching failures since graduating high school in 2019. He is pleasant, well-mannered, and well-spoken but tends toward laziness and has a pattern of lying. He struggled terribly in school. After high school, he enlisted in the military but dropped out four weeks into boot camp, flunked college, and lost a job last summer with no explanation. Last week, he got a new job with decent pay ($ 17 per hour, full-time). However, he rolls out of bed and gets dressed but is oblivious to his appearance-- hair unkept, raggedy shoes, needs to shave, etc.
I have offered to pay for appearance improvement (haircut, new shoes, etc.) under the condition that he pays me back from his first check. Still, he seems mostly disinterested and oblivious to his appearance, which is why I believe he was let go from his last job.
Since my goal is for him to move out, and another layoff would delay that, should I require him to maintain his appearance, or is that too controlling?
Anonymous wrote:You get out what you put in. Good parenting is hard work and time consuming, but, if you take the easy way out, you’ll end up with this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get out what you put in. Good parenting is hard work and time consuming, but, if you take the easy way out, you’ll end up with this.
This is not true. And if it is explain how so many children who have come from nothing (e.g., drug addicted parents, poverty etc.) manage to escape and succeed. Should the meth-head mother take credit for her CEO son's success? Looks like another inexperienced parent of a six-month old infant found their way to a thread they weren't invited to.
No one needs to be “invited” to a thread on DCUM, and the stupid “you’re all just parents of little kids or else you’d be agreeing with me” is asinine. Stop embarrassing yourself.