Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom doesn't make kid tidy room regularly. Offers little to no direction on how room is to be kept.
Imposes out-of-character deadline.
Does not supervise for an hour.
And we're blaming the *kid* for being a "hoarder"?
This forum...![]()
Your concerns would be valid if the child was 5. The child was 11. Mom's expectations were age appropriate.
I haven't supervised my girls cleaning their rooms since they were probably around 6 years old. Can an 11 year old in your world really not handle an hour of "unsupervised" time productively when given a specific task? That seems like really low expectations and a lack of responsibility to me.
My 6 year old can clean her room from hurricane status to near spotless in about 30 minutes, because the room is laid out well, everything has a home, and she's been taught since around 2 that putting her stuff away is her job. So yes, "clean your own room" is certainly age-appropriate.
That said, the reason my kid can do this at 6 is she's been asked, consistently, to do this, taught how, etc. It's not a foreign task to her. It's an everyday thing. You want to watch tv/play iPad/have treats/go to the ball? Clean your room first.
Not the case in OP's story. Also? "Here, I'll help you. Oh, you're not doing it right, well cancel all the things, then. I'm out." is a pretty ridiculous, overdramatic, entirely ineffective parenting strategy.
But the kid is the problem. Clearly. And we're asked to back up the OP's crap parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a sentimental keep everything kid. For various reasons my things were vary important to me. My mom used to go through my things and throw them out and it caused a serious rift in our relationship. It showed me...
....that she didn't care about what was important to me
....that she didn't know me very well to think that it would be okay to throw my stuff out (just because she wouldn't care about those things, then she assumed I wouldn't care about them either).
...that nothing of mine was really mine - that she felt she could do with it as she wanted
...that she had no respect for me (finding things you care about in the trash and knowing they were taken from your space and put there intentionally feels disrespectful).
In the end all her actions did was make me feel even more like keeping stuff, I just got better at hiding it in places she couldn't find. She still found things and threw them out assuming they were of no value since she didn't value them. It was the main reason I really stopped trusting her and no longer confided anything in her as I got into my teen years. I still went on to be a controlled hoarder, and still am, and her throwing out my stuff made it worse.
She gets mad because every time she comes to my house I tell her that she is not to throw a single thing out without my permission. This is no longer her space to do as she pleases and I will not let her continue to disrespect me that way now that I can have a voice. I don't allow her in the bedrooms or anywhere I have my 'stuff'. I don't trust her judgment of what has value to me.
I hope you got help at some point.
Your mother was going about handling it wrong, but it sounds like you might well have a problem. I hope you have found a safe therapeutic place to deal with it, especially if you have kids.
No, I haven't ever done therapy because it doesn't really interfere with my life. I just have too much stuff. My house is sanitary and most of my 'stuff' is in bins. There isn't rotting food, or dead animals or paths through piles. It is also contained to two rooms, neither of which are communal family spaces. I have a storage locker too so extra bins go there. I don't pick up trash and keep it and I throw out actual trash at home - the kids don't even really know I have too much stuff. I don't keep 'everything' - just far more than I need to.