Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he left sports equipment or an instrument behind. If that's the case, I don't know that I'd punish too severely. We all forget things once in a while, even when trying to be careful. I like the idea of reducing his allowance a bit.
That's 7000 dollars?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I am offbase but to me this is like if you break something at work. Even if it was your fault and the mistake costs thousands they can't expect you to be financially responsible.
Anonymous wrote:Do you think punishing him by canceling a trip that is months away will make him more responsible next time? And that feeling horrible now isn't enough to teach him that? My guess is that at 12, there is no guarantee, no matter what you do, that he won't be a bonehead again.
Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine, even given all the examples above, what a 12 year old kid is responsible for that caused that much damage. And if it's something like a plumbing mistake, or theft from the garage, homeowners insurance should cover it.
I'd really, really examine what role parenting played in this. Too much responsibility too soon? Lack of appropriate supervision? Maybe it's none of these, but I'd seriously think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I am offbase but to me this is like if you break something at work. Even if it was your fault and the mistake costs thousands they can't expect you to be financially responsible.
There can be consequences, but the idea that you would somehow hold a 12 year liable for $7k seems a little crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Dang, the mystery is killing me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teenage OCD son habitually used WAY too much toilet paper and clogged up sewage causing a $7000 repair bill. Honestly, there was really nothing we could do but pay it and leverage the incident to get him into the therapy he'd refused. Which, of course, led to even more expenses.
I was going to say some sort of leak or plumbing incident, especially if it damaged flooring.
Anonymous wrote:Teenage OCD son habitually used WAY too much toilet paper and clogged up sewage causing a $7000 repair bill. Honestly, there was really nothing we could do but pay it and leverage the incident to get him into the therapy he'd refused. Which, of course, led to even more expenses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does he think, op? You said he already feels guilty and that this appears to be an accident (he's responsible about this thing usually). What lesson are you trying to teach him? That $7K is a lot of money? That a family is dependent on each other all doing their jobs? That you are pissed? That some mistakes you pay for for a very long time?
What if your spouse had done this thing? How would your family handle it?
If an adult did something which caused $7k in damages or loss, and adult normally would save enough money to replace/fix whatever was lost/damaged. Those are natural consequences of being neglectful. Yes, it happens even to adults, and as an adult, we have to figure out a way to pay for it.