Anonymous wrote:How sad.
My 10 year old had the opposite reaction when we went to visit family in Japan, and he didn't want to come home!
We visited really cool high-tech museums, stayed at a traditional inn (where you sleep in tatami floors in futons), went on hikes in the mountains, and ate the most delicious food.
Maybe the difference with your situation is that we live a very frugal life usually: he doesn't have a lot of toys, we don't go out, there is very little screen time. In that sense, our trip was a REAL luxury and he appreciated it.
What was disrespectful? She asked a question; he answered.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut the screen. Your kid is addicted. Not much else matters.
Is this what you want?
This. His dependence on gaming makes real life unable to measure up. How can it? You took him to Asia. On his screen, he gets Asia + aliens. That explode!
-- mom of 12 yr old boy
I disagree that this is about gaming and/or technology. It's because he's approaching puberty. He's testing you by being a smart ass, so don't let him get away with it! He doesn't have to like the trip, but he does have to be respectful to you.
When I was around that age, my parents took me to NYC, San Francisco, New Orleans, etc. I was a raging idiot, storming through Moma because I thought it was "stupid", wanting to just escape my parents in SF, and being concerned only about my hair and what I was wearing in NO.. I recall nothing meaningful from any if those trips - except that teenage angst.
Now that it is after the fact, you can have a calm discussion with him about his response to you.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. He's actually my stepson, so I don't have a say on the Xbox situation. He is plugged into that thing all day but DH just says "it's summer ".
Anonymous wrote:My parents took me on many expensive overseas vacations growing up and I was so ungrateful. All I did was moan and complain and I still feel so bad. Allow me to apologise on your son's behalf.
Anonymous wrote:My tween is shy and a home body. Sibling is a social butterfly and an avid traveler. I push both to be well-rounded so there are times the tween is forced to use her passport. I don't book 21 day, 7 country trips with her because that would be cruel. I find things that are slow-paced and speak her interests, but are just in another culture. She's a foodie, military history buff, and STEM nerd so Europe is engaging and East Asia is a big draw. She would shrivel up and die on a Disney cruise ship through the Caribbean. Too bad, I'd love a deck chair, stack of books, and a paid tween wrangler.