Anonymous wrote:That "soiling the nest" is a known, common phenomenon doesn't mean that you don't still parent in response to it. Knowing about the phenomenon helps give you a heads up to anticipate it and do things like the PP does like make contracts, have consequences. Also knowing that a lot of teens do this may help you not take it personally. But it's a disservice to yourself, your teen and the rest of the family to put up with this kind of behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are living this right now as well.
Rules we have put in place.
If she can't pick up sibling such that I need to do it, there is no using the car that day.
If clothes are not put away, we do not "give back" clean clothes that somehow found the way into the hall hamper.
We sat down and spoke about financial expectations - my DD decided not to work this summer - fine - we are not providing spending $ beyond the small allowance that she has always had. Not giving money for gifts for friends birthday gifts, starbucks habit etc.
When she decided not to get a job, I wrote on a piece of paper the agreement and she signed it. Is is taped up on the wall so we are all on the same page.
She has a job at the country club and saves every cent. She has a lot of money for her age in the bank. And she constantly picks up shifts to make more money. It's also a convenient excuse for everything. I can't do ___, gotta work. Sorry I didn't do ___, so tired from work.
If we consider punishing her, we get guilt tripped that she had good grades and has a job and we don't know how lucky we are. Other parents often tell us this. Can't win.
She kind of has a point. Your OP painted her as a lazy kid who expects to be waited on hand and foot. But she clearly has ambition and work ethic. I would try picking my battles. Ignore the messy room and let her roommate fight that battle with her if she doesn't change her habits by the fall. Stop making her pick up her siblings, especially if she's worked a double shift that day. They're your kids, not hers. Don't take it personally when she cops an attitude. Do these things and I'd bet a large sum that she lightens up as well.
And for God's sake take Life360 off her phone before she goes to college.
Being a country club lifeguard who sunbaths and socializes all day or cart girl driving around serving drinks to old rich guys for $20 tips demonstrates a high degree of ambition and work ethic?![]()
Just wait until some old rich guy asks her to be his Sugar Baby…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An allowance? She’s 18. My kids stopped getting an allowance when they got their first jobs. Where did she work this summer? My kid works and pays for his own gas, insurance, and for all of his own fun stuff.
Why do people act like a summer job is some magic bullet which teens humble and grateful? If anything, it makes them less accountable, gives them chances to duck off, make excuses, claim to be too tired, too busy, and the money in their pocket makes them feel like they can tell you to buzz off because they have their own money now and don't need to pretend to be nice for a $50 or $100 Venmo transfer.
you sound absolutely nuts …
I grew up middle class -- everyone from the class president to total screw ups and drug addicts had summer jobs. A high school kid with summer job reveals absolutely nothing about character, maturity, or ambition.
Perhaps. But trying to keep an 18 year old from getting a job the summer before they go to college so you can control them is all kinds of weird and wrong
DP: I didn't read it as them wanting to keep them from getting a job, rather not to romanticize the effects of having a job as this sort of panacea for jerkiness.
Anonymous wrote:We experienced the exact same thing last summer with our DD.
Hugs.
Try to take the high road, to the extent possible. And do yoga and deep breathing. IMHO, if you push back too much, she could really rebel. It feels wrong to have to give in to entitlement though. Our family's quality of life greatly improved once our DD went off to college, because of DD's entitled attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teen jobs put upper middle class children around unvetted creepers and bad influences. Some of my best girlfriends in high school were sleeping with their 20-something bosses at dead-end jobs, introduced to drugs, binge drinking, the whole nine. One nearly 30 year old creep manager of a cafe tried to propose to my friend before we left for college. We had just turned 18 that summer.
Sorry you didn't get to have any summer fun
Anonymous wrote:Teen jobs put upper middle class children around unvetted creepers and bad influences. Some of my best girlfriends in high school were sleeping with their 20-something bosses at dead-end jobs, introduced to drugs, binge drinking, the whole nine. One nearly 30 year old creep manager of a cafe tried to propose to my friend before we left for college. We had just turned 18 that summer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are living this right now as well.
Rules we have put in place.
If she can't pick up sibling such that I need to do it, there is no using the car that day.
If clothes are not put away, we do not "give back" clean clothes that somehow found the way into the hall hamper.
We sat down and spoke about financial expectations - my DD decided not to work this summer - fine - we are not providing spending $ beyond the small allowance that she has always had. Not giving money for gifts for friends birthday gifts, starbucks habit etc.
When she decided not to get a job, I wrote on a piece of paper the agreement and she signed it. Is is taped up on the wall so we are all on the same page.
She has a job at the country club and saves every cent. She has a lot of money for her age in the bank. And she constantly picks up shifts to make more money. It's also a convenient excuse for everything. I can't do ___, gotta work. Sorry I didn't do ___, so tired from work.
If we consider punishing her, we get guilt tripped that she had good grades and has a job and we don't know how lucky we are. Other parents often tell us this. Can't win.
She kind of has a point. Your OP painted her as a lazy kid who expects to be waited on hand and foot. But she clearly has ambition and work ethic. I would try picking my battles. Ignore the messy room and let her roommate fight that battle with her if she doesn't change her habits by the fall. Stop making her pick up her siblings, especially if she's worked a double shift that day. They're your kids, not hers. Don't take it personally when she cops an attitude. Do these things and I'd bet a large sum that she lightens up as well.
And for God's sake take Life360 off her phone before she goes to college.
Being a country club lifeguard who sunbaths and socializes all day or cart girl driving around serving drinks to old rich guys for $20 tips demonstrates a high degree of ambition and work ethic?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An allowance? She’s 18. My kids stopped getting an allowance when they got their first jobs. Where did she work this summer? My kid works and pays for his own gas, insurance, and for all of his own fun stuff.
Why do people act like a summer job is some magic bullet which teens humble and grateful? If anything, it makes them less accountable, gives them chances to duck off, make excuses, claim to be too tired, too busy, and the money in their pocket makes them feel like they can tell you to buzz off because they have their own money now and don't need to pretend to be nice for a $50 or $100 Venmo transfer.
you sound absolutely nuts …
I grew up middle class -- everyone from the class president to total screw ups and drug addicts had summer jobs. A high school kid with summer job reveals absolutely nothing about character, maturity, or ambition.
Perhaps. But trying to keep an 18 year old from getting a job the summer before they go to college so you can control them is all kinds of weird and wrong
DP: I didn't read it as them wanting to keep them from getting a job, rather not to romanticize the effects of having a job as this sort of panacea for jerkiness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An allowance? She’s 18. My kids stopped getting an allowance when they got their first jobs. Where did she work this summer? My kid works and pays for his own gas, insurance, and for all of his own fun stuff.
Why do people act like a summer job is some magic bullet which teens humble and grateful? If anything, it makes them less accountable, gives them chances to duck off, make excuses, claim to be too tired, too busy, and the money in their pocket makes them feel like they can tell you to buzz off because they have their own money now and don't need to pretend to be nice for a $50 or $100 Venmo transfer.
you sound absolutely nuts …
I grew up middle class -- everyone from the class president to total screw ups and drug addicts had summer jobs. A high school kid with summer job reveals absolutely nothing about character, maturity, or ambition.
Perhaps. But trying to keep an 18 year old from getting a job the summer before they go to college so you can control them is all kinds of weird and wrong
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An allowance? She’s 18. My kids stopped getting an allowance when they got their first jobs. Where did she work this summer? My kid works and pays for his own gas, insurance, and for all of his own fun stuff.
Why do people act like a summer job is some magic bullet which teens humble and grateful? If anything, it makes them less accountable, gives them chances to duck off, make excuses, claim to be too tired, too busy, and the money in their pocket makes them feel like they can tell you to buzz off because they have their own money now and don't need to pretend to be nice for a $50 or $100 Venmo transfer.
you sound absolutely nuts …
I grew up middle class -- everyone from the class president to total screw ups and drug addicts had summer jobs. A high school kid with summer job reveals absolutely nothing about character, maturity, or ambition.