Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to send him home early? "Elroy doesn't seem to be enjoying himself. I know he'd never complain, but I found a ticket for $X more than his current return, and it might be worth it to spare him life with younger cousins"
Stop charging his phone.
Tell him to stop with the jump scares. If you drop something because of one, send him to his room "While I calm down. We'll try to save you some lasagna"
Just observe, when he's rude, "That was rude."
Stop acting like food preferences are an indicator of moral virtue: "My kids ate the peppers and onions and complained that the sausages were too greasy and made their stomachs feel weird." Hoo-ray for your kids, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:You need to grow a spine here! He is a child. Your beach house, your rules. You do not have to treat him with the deference you would give an adult guest.
Sit him down today for a talk. Tell him from now on he is to leave DD alone, and NO JUMP SCARES. Quiet time starts at 10 PM. If he does not like those rules, you will arrange to send him home. (This may be what he wants). Tell him very explicitly: These are the house rules, you can follow the rules or you can go.
You can take him to a store to spend his own pocket money on a charger.
I would not bother caring what he eats. His parents obviously don't. Serve what you serve and he can take it or leave it.
Remember, it's in his best interest to learn these life lessons.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let me be clear on something: I did not know it would just be my nephew until the night before he arrived. My sister worked everything out with my mom, who paid for his plane ticket.
The ticket was bought without my approval. I had packed the car and had to delay a day to wait for Nephew’s plane to come in.
Anonymous wrote:If I agree to take your kid for a week, they are following my rules. I won't feed them something they are allergic to but otherwise, they follow the rules of MY family. I will also discipline them as I see fit just like I would my own kids. Don't like it? Keep them at home with you.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I can’t just leave an 11 yr old stranded at BWI.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I had a couple good interactions with Nephew.
1. I asked him what vegetable he’d like for dinner and he requested broccoli! I can do broccoli!
2. Nephew has a cut and 8 stitches on his hand from water skiing last week. His bandage fell off, so he asked me for help getting a new one. I put on some ointment and bandaged it up. He exclaimed, “Wow! You take such good care of me! Thank
So, I think there’s hope for this trip to go okay.
Anonymous wrote:As others have said, your house, your rules.
His phone goes with you when you go to bed at 10 and you will charge it for him overnight. You don’t provide access to a charger otherwise.
Have some food options he can help himself to. If he makes a rude comment, calmly say « that was rude and I do not appreciate it. There’s cereal in the cupboard if you’d like some « and then move on.
No tolerance for jump scares or teasing your daughter. Tell him if he continues that he’ll need to spend some quiet time in his room away from the rest of you.
Hold firm on all of this but otherwise be warm and loving and let other little things go. He’s a kid and is looking for some guidance and love.