Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you divorced? Widowed?
I'm widowed. Spouse died suddenly a year ago. DS found him (I was on a business trip). DS has depression and cutting, and spurts of anger. Yes, he needs limits, and I don't want to play chicken with ending his sports team, as it's an important outlet for him and a source of continuity and stability. Having good friendships is a protective factor for suicide prevention. Which yes, also is a concern, when he's really sad.
So we are a work in progress.
I appreciate all the suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a parenting problem.
At 14 all the things you listed are huge privileges and your son is being a huge brat. It’s time for a reality check. He is way too old to be acting this bratty and you’re enabling his entitlement which is terrible parenting. You’re basically teaching him to be an a$$hole.
The first thing to go will be social visits.
Next will be travel sports.
He needs to be polite and responsible about the rides from the au pair. If he can’t do that he will lose his privileges.
Talk to him separately and then with the au pair. Set clear expectations. He has 2 weeks to turn things around before you start taking away privileges. Seriously. Right now you’re giving him stuff and he’s basically spitting in your face with disrespect.
All of this
You are considering quitting your job to be a full-time chauffeur to a teenage brat?
You have already figured this out and are doing a lot for him. Au pair is perfect for this situation and he needs to grow up.
Anonymous wrote:This is a parenting problem.
At 14 all the things you listed are huge privileges and your son is being a huge brat. It’s time for a reality check. He is way too old to be acting this bratty and you’re enabling his entitlement which is terrible parenting. You’re basically teaching him to be an a$$hole.
The first thing to go will be social visits.
Next will be travel sports.
He needs to be polite and responsible about the rides from the au pair. If he can’t do that he will lose his privileges.
Talk to him separately and then with the au pair. Set clear expectations. He has 2 weeks to turn things around before you start taking away privileges. Seriously. Right now you’re giving him stuff and he’s basically spitting in your face with disrespect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you divorced? Widowed?
I'm widowed. Spouse died suddenly a year ago. DS found him (I was on a business trip). DS has depression and cutting, and spurts of anger. Yes, he needs limits, and I don't want to play chicken with ending his sports team, as it's an important outlet for him and a source of continuity and stability. Having good friendships is a protective factor for suicide prevention. Which yes, also is a concern, when he's really sad.
So we are a work in progress.
I appreciate all the suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:I’m very sorry about your husband. And about your son’s worries and his own sadness.
I’ve parented two 14yo boys, and I know it’s a tough age. They want to be grown up, and ten seconds later they are watching cartoons. The swings of mood/emotion/direction/energy are unreal.
Can you sit down over hot chocolate, or go out to breakfast somewhere, and say you need his help? Your family team is smaller, and at the same time you’re trying to make sense of all the feelings that come with that, there are all sorts of new practical aspects. How can you two better work together to make life kinder and easier for each other?
Bring up some of the sticking points and brainstorm solutions. Explain outright that you hired the au pair to help make his life easier — he may think of her as an unwanted, bossy older sister instead of a guaranteed ride to Jacob’s house. Talk about how your new life requires a lot more pre-planning, and agree to put things on a shared Google calendar. Make sure he has a bike/bus pass so he can get to the store to buy snacks for friends coming over — or make that part of their afternoon. (My boys loved wandering through Giant with their friends and triumphantly coming home with day-old pastries because THEY WERE ON SALE, MOM!!!) Giving him more ownership and control of the solution may help him feel less at sea.
On days when you have to drive to therapy, practice, etc., is there a way you can use that chunk of time for your own errands? Scout out grocery stores near ball fields and use the hour of warmups to get your shopping done (get nonperishables or bring a cooler). Sit in the car and return calls, sign up for activities, schedule household services, etc.
I wish your son was on my kid’s team. We’d have a regular (and nonreciprocal) carpool organized for you so fast it would make your head spin.