Anonymous wrote:When we experienced this, we set parameters. Saying no wasn’t going to work. So we assigned acceptable locations for both storage of his smoking materials and using. I don’t like it but at least my house doesn’t smell and we aren’t fighting over something that I can’t control.
Anonymous wrote:When we experienced this, we set parameters. Saying no wasn’t going to work. So we assigned acceptable locations for both storage of his smoking materials and using. I don’t like it but at least my house doesn’t smell and we aren’t fighting over something that I can’t control.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is his father?
OP here - Divorced for 10 years. He sees the kids sometimes but is never any support in my household. Whenever he picks them up, he always causes some issues.
re any of your teens mentally ill and have spent years in and out of hospitals and treatment centers? And have they been exceedingly violent and the juvenile justice and mental health systems left you dealing with it alone? If not, don’t judge. You might make the same decisions if you had actually walked in my shoes.
Anonymous wrote:I started drug testing my son after the first time. Any positive test resulted in loss of phone and Internet plus grounding. He never did it again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is his father?
+1.
You don't need a father/man to set house rules.
You don't need a father/man to set expectations for your kids.
You don't need a father/man for your kids to respect you.
I'm happily married, but I sure don't need my husband to set the house rules.
That's nice. But that's not what was discussed or proposed.
When it comes to deterring or curbing high-risk adolescent behavior, fathers are a vital part of the equation.
Can you do it without them? Maybe.
Are you more likely to fail without their involvement? Yes.
Don't mislead mothers. The data is there for you to review it.
Good fathers are a vital part of the equation. Bad ones, with substance abuse, anger management issues, poorly managed mental health issues, are NOT good for kids.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Is this a troll? I would go ape sh*t if my kid did this. Change the Wi-Fi password (it’s summer so he doesn’t need it for school). Take away his phone. Tell him he is getting no money from you for three months. He can pack food at home if he wants to eat when he is not in the house. I would not allow him to leave the house until school starts unless accompanied by me or spouse. I would come down hard on this.
And I would start monthly random drug testing.