Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You handled this specific incident fine in my book, but that entitlement and ingratitude monster is strong in him. You have your work cut out for you.
Or he was a sleep deprived 14 year old experimenting with being what he thought of as hilariously sarcastic or something. It was undeniably incredibly rude and there’s every chance when he’s older he will be mortified by it. I don’t think it’s necessarily time to send him to a reduction camp because of one (extremely ill advised) comment.
Anonymous wrote:I think making a huge deal out of this could damage the relationship between your ds and his grandpa. Grandpa is hurt, and now your ds is hurt too because his short rude outburst has become this crazy big drama over thousands of dollars of tuition. Teens are not perfect, and seeing adults react very strongly to a slight can be tough on them and make them withdraw further emotionally.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if this is entitlement so much as moody rude teen lashing out. That doesn't make it ok but I would want to know what his patterns are before deciding on tackling entitled ungrateful attitudes or controlling behavior and mood swings
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure taking away his gaming computer for just a month makes any difference, other than teach your teen to 'act' a certain way in front of certain people even if he feels the opposite. 14 is old enough to know that your family (at least DH's side) is wealthy so this is just about par for the course for how such an entitled teen might act.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have this all wrong. That the kids grandfather is fully funding his college is completely irrelevant. No matter what gift the grandfather gives them, even if it’s just a card, a “good kid“ says thank you. That’s it. Your kid should have his ass kicked. I would absolutely kill my kid for this. I’m not kidding. And it would have nothing to do with the college fund.
Anonymous wrote:I think OP and spouse had to tell kids about the college fund because otherwise it would seem as if grandpa didn't give them any gift at all. Since they know he isn't poor, that would seem very odd.
I'd do 2 things. First, explain that grandpa can change the beneficiary of the 529. (within limits, he can.) If GS seems ungrateful for the gift, he might just do that. In that case,GS won't be going to college or will have to work his way through because you haven't saved. Second explain that if grandpa wasn't doing this, the family couldn't take nice vacations..or he couldn't play on a travel team (if he does) or do something else he enjoys or live in the school district because you can only afford your house because you don't have to save for college. In other words, explain how grandpa's generosity benefits him now..if it does.
I think it's at least possible that OP's son is not sure he wants to go to college but hasn't said so yet. If he is ambivalent, he might see the fact that the money is there as something to bludgeon him into doing so. If he's thinking he'd like to join the military or become a plumber or electrician or even just stay at home and going to the local community college, he might see this "gift" as pressure to do something he isn't sure he wants to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you are very wealthy and he’s entitled. You need to teach him about money. My parents have money and no gift and no college fund. They know to keep those comments to us only.
We are not very wealthy, at least by DCUM standards. We aren’t struggling but would not be able to afford to send all three kids to college without digging into our savings and retirement.
My FIL is well off and was able to do this, but not enough where it’s like a drop in the bucket for him to be able to afford this.
We are all very thankful. We have not raised our kids to be entitled or expect more than they are given. None of our kids have shown this level of disrespect and ungratefulness until this incident.
Like I said, it was out of character.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS14 (overall) is a good kid. He’s motivated at school, in sports and at home. We don’t have major issues with bad attitudes or laziness. He’s fairly responsible for a teenage boy and we really only have to interfere seldomly.
My in-laws are divorced and we usually spend Christmas with my FIL in late December. He (FIL) is a good man. He’s not the super affectionate type but he loves our kids. He is genuinely interested in who they are as people and has always spoken to them like they were unique individuals.
For all three of our kids he has a college savings fund he started for them when they were babies. At 14 DS already has enough money in his college savings to attend any university he desired and was able to get into. He’s been told about this account for years and know it’s a privilege many kids do not get. Because my FIL ours so much $$$$ into the account every year he doesn’t do Christmas or birthday gifts. Just a card.
This has never been anything my kids ever brought up until DS decided to make an incredibly rude (and out of character) remark in front of his Grandfather when given the card.
He kind of was grumpy the entire day due to staying up the night before. He wasn’t thrilled about going to visit FIl but didn’t protest too much.
We had a good time and after eating FIL handed all of our kids their Christmas card and DS goes, “let me guess, another empty card.”
DH immediately snapped at him and told him that was rude. Then I explained how grateful he’ll be when he is able to graduate college without student loan debt.
DS responded, “oh yeah, so grateful for a gift I didn’t ever ask for.”
DH got angry and asked him to step outside. I apologies to FIL who was put off by the comment. DH had discussion about gratefulness and then we decided to ground him from one of his big gifts (gaming computer) for this month in hopes the absence of the gift would teach him a lesson but I’m not sure it is. He apologized to his Grandfather but I don’t think he understands how rude the comment was or how big of a deal it is his grandfather does this for him.
I know he’s only 14 but his siblings are younger and we’re very genuinely outwardly grateful. I feel like they didn’t have any expectations for gifts even if they also don’t fully understand the gravity of this account.
Any ideas on what would be an appropriate consequence? How to get the lesson through his head?
This is a present to you, not your kid. Why would he need to graduate with student loan debt if grandfather stopped contributing? Why have you been telling him about the account for years?
I think you are concerned the bank of FIL may close.