Anonymous wrote:My teen sophomore literally does nothing and I am concerned. They used to play sports, play an instrument, do scouting, and do theater/acting, and enjoyed them all. Normal happy well rounded teen. This year they have stopped doing all of it. Quit sports after we spent $1000 on a club team - just refused to go and we aren’t in the position to physically force them. Quit the instrument and refuses to play or go. Quit scouts saying it’s not fun anymore. And no longer wants to audition for any theater or acting programs or projects.
My kid has become a quitter.![]()
I wish I could say they are focusing on schoolwork but they are getting Bs and Cs and an occasional D or F.
All they want to do is sit around, play videogames in the computer, eat, and watch TV.
I am very concerned about their mental health and well being - even though they seem perfectly content and happy doing nothing. I am worried about college admissions. I don’t want an adult sloth freeloading and loafing around but at this rate they won’t get into college.
Has anyone else gone through this? DC already sees a therapist but refuses to talk or engage with the doc and just sits giving one word answers.
Anonymous wrote:My aspergers daughter tries to quit everything as well. Lots of defiance disorder, a negative cope.
Anonymous wrote:My teen sophomore literally does nothing and I am concerned. They used to play sports, play an instrument, do scouting, and do theater/acting, and enjoyed them all. Normal happy well rounded teen. This year they have stopped doing all of it. Quit sports after we spent $1000 on a club team - just refused to go and we aren’t in the position to physically force them. Quit the instrument and refuses to play or go. Quit scouts saying it’s not fun anymore. And no longer wants to audition for any theater or acting programs or projects.
My kid has become a quitter.![]()
I wish I could say they are focusing on schoolwork but they are getting Bs and Cs and an occasional D or F.
All they want to do is sit around, play videogames in the computer, eat, and watch TV.
I am very concerned about their mental health and well being - even though they seem perfectly content and happy doing nothing. I am worried about college admissions. I don’t want an adult sloth freeloading and loafing around but at this rate they won’t get into college.
Has anyone else gone through this? DC already sees a therapist but refuses to talk or engage with the doc and just sits giving one word answers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes a special kind to do crew. It's not surprising he quit scouts. It's a bit babyish. He is approaching adulthood. If those things don't interest him anymore, tell him to get a job. Do more stuff around the house. Tie access to phone and screen time to doing something productive.
This tells me you don’t know Scouts. As kids get older, there are more opportunities that are age appropriate. By 14, Scouts have access to high adventure camps, both local and national. There are 5-10 backpacking trips, 5-10 canoing trips, scuba diving, sailing, dog mushing and other activities. If a Scout is interested, they should bring it to the attention of their SPL and Scoutmaster and see if there are other kids interested and start planning. Our Troop goes caving, climbing, backpacking, canoeing and white water rafting on top of the regular camp outs. One Scout planned a deep sea fishing camp out, with regular fishing for people who didn’t want to pay the cost for deep sea fishing. Scouts is what the Scouts make of it.
Older Scouts should be responsible for planning meetings, planning campouts, and running the Troop with adult supervision. Or they can join a Venture crew, you can start at 14, where Scouts are out doing high adventure prep.
It is not for everyone but the program is not “babyish.” If it is, your kid is in the wrong Troop.
Thanks for saying this. I know scouts is not for everyone but - but what my son does is not baby-ish at all. Lots of adventures and leading young kids.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone else gone through this? DC already sees a therapist but refuses to talk or engage with the doc and just sits giving one word answers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes a special kind to do crew. It's not surprising he quit scouts. It's a bit babyish. He is approaching adulthood. If those things don't interest him anymore, tell him to get a job. Do more stuff around the house. Tie access to phone and screen time to doing something productive.
This tells me you don’t know Scouts. As kids get older, there are more opportunities that are age appropriate. By 14, Scouts have access to high adventure camps, both local and national. There are 5-10 backpacking trips, 5-10 canoing trips, scuba diving, sailing, dog mushing and other activities. If a Scout is interested, they should bring it to the attention of their SPL and Scoutmaster and see if there are other kids interested and start planning. Our Troop goes caving, climbing, backpacking, canoeing and white water rafting on top of the regular camp outs. One Scout planned a deep sea fishing camp out, with regular fishing for people who didn’t want to pay the cost for deep sea fishing. Scouts is what the Scouts make of it.
Older Scouts should be responsible for planning meetings, planning campouts, and running the Troop with adult supervision. Or they can join a Venture crew, you can start at 14, where Scouts are out doing high adventure prep.
It is not for everyone but the program is not “babyish.” If it is, your kid is in the wrong Troop.
Thanks for saying this. I know scouts is not for everyone but - but what my son does is not baby-ish at all. Lots of adventures and leading young kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes a special kind to do crew. It's not surprising he quit scouts. It's a bit babyish. He is approaching adulthood. If those things don't interest him anymore, tell him to get a job. Do more stuff around the house. Tie access to phone and screen time to doing something productive.
This tells me you don’t know Scouts. As kids get older, there are more opportunities that are age appropriate. By 14, Scouts have access to high adventure camps, both local and national. There are 5-10 backpacking trips, 5-10 canoing trips, scuba diving, sailing, dog mushing and other activities. If a Scout is interested, they should bring it to the attention of their SPL and Scoutmaster and see if there are other kids interested and start planning. Our Troop goes caving, climbing, backpacking, canoeing and white water rafting on top of the regular camp outs. One Scout planned a deep sea fishing camp out, with regular fishing for people who didn’t want to pay the cost for deep sea fishing. Scouts is what the Scouts make of it.
Older Scouts should be responsible for planning meetings, planning campouts, and running the Troop with adult supervision. Or they can join a Venture crew, you can start at 14, where Scouts are out doing high adventure prep.
It is not for everyone but the program is not “babyish.” If it is, your kid is in the wrong Troop.