T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
113.1 | | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! in Littleton Hills Mangler | Wed Jun 10 1987 00:26 | 12 |
|
Did you steal my brother Bonnie??
I almost want to say "Give it up". Boys that age are absolutely
useless for anything other than chasing girls and driving cars
too fast.. I know cuz I was exactly the sam way 9 (Gulp) years
ago and that is the way my brother Dennis is today. Thank God
my brother Bill isn't like that and he's only a year older than
Dennis! (it's probably cuz he works for DEC.. :-))
mike
|
113.2 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | | Wed Jun 10 1987 07:19 | 3 |
| Four words suffice : "My house, My rules".
or one acronym "TANSTAAFL".
|
113.3 | trust | NYOB::HURLEY | | Wed Jun 10 1987 08:46 | 10 |
| Bonnie, through my own expirence I.E. going into the service at
18, let him explore himself. There is an old saying you got to let
go and they will come back. Trying to force him to tell you what
he's up to may make what he's up to worse.
Chores? I don't know take it slow and when he gets tired of running
arround he'll proably start to help.
in final trust in the job YOU have done raising him and he'll show
you how well you've done.
|
113.4 | Well, start by giving your reasons... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Wed Jun 10 1987 10:09 | 27 |
|
How come I never went through this when I was 17? Well, I'm an
introvert and didn't have a lot of friends and I didn't bother getting
a driver's license till I needed it to go to work....
Yeah, I know, not much help. Well, when these conflicts arose in
my family, my parents would always lay out reasons for things that
had little to do with the fact that they were my parents.
Sit down and have a talk, and lay out some very practical reasons
why you want him to do this stuff. Like:
"I want you to to ask to use the car, so I don't get the idea it's
been stolen when I see it isn't here."
"I want to know where you're going and when you'll be back, because
I might need to get hold of you."
"I want you to help around the house, because you are practically
an adult human person and very soon you will have to shoulder
considerably heavier responsibilities than this."
Speak to the lad. Sound him out. And if he stays petulant, he
hasn't finished growing up yet, and you can resort to the methods
you use on children.
DFW
|
113.5 | Only time will tell | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Wed Jun 10 1987 10:10 | 6 |
|
Maybe when some "older" kids pull up and *laugh* at him for
having "Dad's car", he'll realise that there is worth and benifit
to carrying his own weight -
JJJ
|
113.6 | inexperienced opinion | RDGE43::MCDONALD | | Wed Jun 10 1987 10:12 | 41 |
|
I was very hesitant to reply to this since I haven't any children
at all let alone one 17. However, it stirred some very strong feelings
and I thought I'd put in my 2 cents.
A bit of History---
I have 2 younger brothers and we are all 18 months apart. when we
were at 'that age' my brothers had similar attitudes. My father
tended to be overbearing most of the time but he had the same thought
as .2 "My house, My rules." There were times when I deeply resented
the rules; thought they were too restrictive. But I was never the
rebellious type (more of a mouse to my fathers lion but that's another
story) I *could* understand that he could make the rules in
his own house.
My brothers, for one reason and another, were less understanding.
The bottom line is that finally one brother could stand the rules
no more and left. (This upset my mother terribly because at the time
he had no job and nowhere to go.) The other brother put up with
it (there are definite advantages to living at home) and still lives
at home at the ripe old age of 26. (He does pay rent and do repairs
to the house, cook his own meals etc.)
To sum up-----
It is my opinion (with its lack of practical experience) that if your
son wants to be "independent" and an adult he should understand
the responsibilities that come with adulthood. Expecting other people
to feed, clothe, house, and provide transportation for him without
giving anything in return is not only irresponsible it is selfish
and inconsiderate.
If he is impervious to this argument then perhaps a stint of doing
his own laundry, fixing his own meals, buying his own petrol, and
paying the car note would not be a bad idea. Independence is not
= Carefree.
Sorry this was so long. If this is a useless suggestion, chuck it
out but I felt I had to respond. :^)
LaDonna
|
113.7 | Ah, memories.... | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Danger : I drive like you do! | Wed Jun 10 1987 10:39 | 21 |
|
Ah, 17, was really only 4 years ago?
My parents had an easy solution:
The car was registered in Mom's name, and because my license expired
at 1:00 am (as does your sons if you live in Mass.) The car Had
to be back by 1:00. Also had to ask permision to borrow the car.
If I took the car without asking, or the car was not back by 1:00
(if I called with a real good excuse, like "hi I can't drive", it was ok...)
then they would call the police and report the car stolen. Real severe,
but sitting in a lockup all night enforces the point, real well.
As far as chores went, guilt and the car are good leverages. Guilt
takes a bit longer thou. Mom never asked me to do a thing, but
boy did she complain while she was doing it. Eventually you'd do
all the chores, just to shut her up...
Good luck,
Clark.
|
113.8 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Wed Jun 10 1987 11:20 | 16 |
| Give the kid a bit of rope. He'll stub his toe a few times, but it's
much better to get into a tight situation now, when he knows that he
can fall back on his parents. If you protect him from danger now,
he'll likely just find it a few years down the road, when he may not
be able or willing to use the same security net. Of course he'll
screw up -- how else is he going to learn?
I can think of nothing meaner or less understanding than the "it's my
house [or car] and I'll make the rules" attitude. A seventeen
year-old simply does not have the option of buying a house, or even
buying a car on his own. If you aren't willing to share your
possessions with your children -- and sharing does not imply the
unilateral imposition of restrictive rules -- then you're placing a
good-sized barrier between yourself and your kids.
--Mr Topaz
|
113.9 | | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! in Littleton Hills Mangler | Wed Jun 10 1987 12:13 | 11 |
| RE: driving the car.
It wouldn't work with my brother. He's 18 and has had a total
of 9 or 10 cars since age 16. Everything from a 77 Triumph to a
70 Mustang Convertible (that he bought for a $100 and it runs
like a champ).
Pray that it's only a phase and that he'll soon come out of
it. (My Mom said it worked for me.. :-))
mike
|
113.10 | personal experience | HULK::DJPL | Do you believe in magic? | Wed Jun 10 1987 14:39 | 26 |
| When I was that age [8 years ago], it was like having 'all of the above'.
First and foremost: "My house, my rules"
Second: "You are allowed certain freedoms but you also have responsibilities"
Third: "If you have a problem with aspects of #2, we will review it on a
case by case basis".
Fourth: "There is a mortgage/rent on this place. If you are working you
will contribute what you can. It will not be unreasonable and
it will allow you more freedoms. If you are not working, it will
be waived, but you will be expected to contribute in other ways."
Fifth: "You want a car, you buy it. If you can't afford it, but you can
afford payments, we will TALK about co-signing a loan. The car
must pass 'approval'."
Overall: "Nothing in life is free. You earn what you get. But there is
a loving support structure here when you need it. Not
just when it's convenient for you."
Worked pretty good for me and it's what I plan to use when the time comes
[in 17 years 2.5 months].
dj
|
113.11 | Try everything | VICKI::BULLOCK | Living the good life | Wed Jun 10 1987 14:49 | 35 |
| Boy, what a horrible age--I say it both in memory and in teaching
kids that age every week.
I remember being 17, and how much a HATED hearing "Until YOU pay
all the bills, you do it MY way!". However, I always had chores
to do; that's how I got my allowance.
I should say here that I have no kids of my own; but I do teach
a group of them each week, and have since they were all 14. What
a difference! They used to be "my boys", and thought they'd raise
a little hell from time to time, it was nothing I couldn't handle.
Now they are 17, and are at that "no longer a kid, but not an adult
yet" stage. They take their mothers' cars, and get in accidents,
they mouth off to their dads, they shirk chores, and get in trouble
at school. Since I know that their "raw material" is good, I don't
worry all that much--I know that they'll fall back to earth sooner
or later. But I do feel sorry for their folks right now.
When they act up or do something irresponsible in my class, I have
found that the only way I can get through to them is to talk to
them like adults (even if they have been acting like children).
They may laugh their heads off at me when they're alone, but I do
it anyway. I tell them what is expected of them; that, like it
or not, they have certain responsibilities, especially since they
are older than most of my students, and that I expect them to set
a good example.
As someone else noted here already, you do whatever works at the
time, pray, and hope that the early training you gave them bears
fruit.
Good luck to you--and don't take any crap, either--your life is
important, too!
Jane
|
113.12 | The age of Wisdom...just ask them. | NRADM::MITCHELL | | Wed Jun 10 1987 16:53 | 32 |
| I have a clipping on my refrigerator from an Anne Landers column.
It was taken from a sign in a doctors office.
It reads:
Attention Teenagers!
If you are tired of being hassled
by unreasonable parents....
Now is the time for action!
Leave home and pay your own way
while you still know everything!
.10 has the right idea. Some are more mature than others and
can assume responsibilities without too much prompting...others
are absolutely useless...Boys & Girls. I think Girls are worse.
I.E. you got more to worry about.
4 boys and 3 girls is enough...time for me to cruise now.
Can't wait for the last 2 to leave home and do their own
thing.
Then we'll sell the house and buy a 1 bedroom ranch with
no basement and no sleep sofa and hopefully live long
enough to be a problem for the kids :-))
Know anyone with unmarrieds in their thirties still living
at home? what a pain!
If you taught 'em right they'll make it past puberty and
you'll be proud as hell of them all. I am.
___GM___
|
113.13 | Reasoning usually works | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Jun 10 1987 17:14 | 10 |
| I have been enjoying reading all the replies. I would like
to add that my son is not the kind of person that "its my
house, its my rules" would work with. We have always encouaged
him to be responsible and independant. He will listen to good
reasons usually, to arbitrary rules, almost never. Today he
abided by the fact that we had taken the car away becuase he
failed to tell us where he was - even tho he had a second set of
keys. Bascially I trust him and am very proud of him. We just
want to convince him that letting us know where and when he is
going is not an infringement on his life.
|
113.14 | Sounds good but... | NANUCK::FORD | Noterdamus | Wed Jun 10 1987 22:03 | 19 |
| > Give the kid a bit of rope. He'll stub his toe a few times, but it's
> much better to get into a tight situation now, when he knows that he
> can fall back on his parents.
Be careful, the rope can become a noose around the parents neck
and the equivalent of the apron string around the kid.
I say base your rules on the following (there are more but from
experience I rate these two high):
1. Your understanding of your childs maturity level. There are
no absolutes that apply to each child.
2. What effect (emotionally and monetarily) the rules and their
enforcement, combined with problems they may cause, will have on the
family (including the parents).
JEF
|
113.15 | | MUNICH::CLINCH | This mind is intentionally left blank. | Fri Jun 12 1987 08:55 | 53 |
| re .0
In terms of chores, etc. A question in my mind is to what extent
is he treated as an equal. I am not venturing an opinion on how
equally he should be treated as an adult, but it seems to me
that rights and responsibility are interconnected. The
level of responsibility such as chores he (or anyone in life) is
likely to accept will tend to equal the amount of say he has in
his life. Where a child is financially dependent on its parents,
this has two considerations: (1) That it is not the parents role
to satisfy his every whim, but (2) it is not his fault that he is
financially dependent on his parents.
My personal two pfennigs (again I have no children yet) would be to
encourage responsibility *by* alotting rights. For example,
one approach could be to involve him in say a monthly "board
meeting" on how the family resources are organised in terms
of revenue and equipment. When he is more aware that his needs
are in competition with yours and require joint decisions, then
he will be more apt to be responsible. If your needs on the other
hand are just as "unexpected" to him as his are to you, then this
seems to be a preliminary blockage.
In terms of accountability, it seems that he should have the
freedom to say, "I am not sure how late I will be out tonight
or where I will be after a certain time." But the important thing
is that he should declare things in advance and keep any promises
he makes.
re .2
> Four words suffice : "My house, My rules".
This seems on the extreme side. Merely because one is a parent
does not give one ownership, but to some extent you have
responsibility. By choosing to have a child you have to accept that
the child needs freedom. It is your fault that he lives in your house.
You chose to have him. The opposing consideration (that you don't
have to attend to his every whim and you have needs too) means
that a middle course needs to be found and will develop continuously
until the child is financially self-sufficient and negotiation
won't even stop there.
re .4
This seems sound although I would not say a young person can be fitted
into only two categories (responsible and irresponsible) - there
is a gradation.
re .14
> Be careful, the rope can become a noose around the parents neck
> and the equivalent of the apron string around the kid...
Yes I would agree: A "balancing act" is required.
Simon.
|
113.16 | F#%$ `um if they can't take a joke!! | INK::BUCKLEY | Restless and Wild | Fri Jun 12 1987 12:34 | 16 |
| Re .0
Save yourself a few headaches...let the kid do what he wants...he
will anyway.
One thing I can't stand are parents who think they know what's right
for an individual just because they're not 21. I think you have
to start leading your own life by 16 or forget it, you'll be hopelessly
lost forever in society!
re -2 and others:
You're right, if you don't like it, leave, or put up and shut up!
take yer pick.
Bj
|
113.17 | Hang in there | BEES::PARE | | Fri Jun 12 1987 13:27 | 29 |
| My oldest boy will be eighteen next month. He has his own car (bought
with money he earned working in a gas station). We have very few
rules but those that we DO have are considered important and are
adhered to (for example: no drinking and driving) voluntarily.
If he is at a party and has been drinking, he will sleep over rather
than get in the car and drive. He doesn't seem to mind telling
me where he is going, but that doesn't restrict him from changing
his mind and going somewhere else either. He is very independent,
responsible and mature but also has a lot of friends and loves to
party and have a good time. I trust him. He has never given me
a reason not to trust him. Next year he will be going off to college
and (because the dorms are full) he will have to stay in his own
apartment. I feel that he has had enough freedom to acquire the
necessary skills to live alone successfully...(fingers crossed).
Boys of that age are not children and can't be treated as such.
I would never set down stringent (and usually meaningless) rules
for him to obey or get out because I love him and I don't want him
to leave until he is ready. Its hard seeing our children grow up...
(especially us protective mothers_:-).
I gave up on chores long ago. Now nobody does them until I can't
stand it anymore and then I have a screaming fit and everybody pitches
in to shut me up_:-) (its worked so far...)
My younger son gets paid to help out too (since he doesn't have
a job yet).
I haven't the slightest idea of how to raise girls but I adore boys
and especially teenage boys (lately). They are so sensitive,
considerate, full_of_life, adventurous, and somehow noble.
I'll bet your son will turn out just fine (how could it be otherwise
with a mother like you Bonny?)
|
113.18 | You have to tailor your actions to the kid... | LILAC::MKPROJ | REAGAN::ZORE | Fri Jun 12 1987 13:37 | 32 |
| RE: -1
Excuse me for disagreeing, however I'm certain that the "let
the kid do what he wants" tactic you espouse is not really what
you mean to say. In some families that kind of attitude would lead
to wild parties in the house whenever you are away, your car(s)
being totaled on a consistant basis (DWI), any beer/wine/booze you
keep on hand being stolen and passed out among freinds, various
other sundry experiances like waking up at 3 am to find your car
doused in gas cause somebody had a gripe. These are the kinds of
things that can and do happen to some families and they happen because
the parents either don't have the backbone to to kick the kid out
and make it stick or because when the kid does get in trouble, they
bail him out.
Now I know that's not what you meant to say. What you really
meant to say was: As long as he's not breaking the law and he is
respecting my rights, he should be allowed to pretty much do what
he wants.
Am I correct?
Rich
PS My own 2 cents would be in aggreement that the teenagers of
a family should be brought more and more into the actual running
of the household. To many parents relate to thier teens as kids
when the kids really are ready to assume critical decision making
responsibilities as adults. I'm not talking about where I want
my bed positioned kind of decisions but decisions regarding household
finance, running a checking account (the teens own), etc.
One rule would be above everything else: If a teen gets in trouble
due to somthing he did, "Well you made your bed, now lay in it.".
|
113.19 | I guess I've been lucky to have had such boys | BEES::PARE | | Fri Jun 12 1987 14:32 | 49 |
| I think the behavior patterns you describe are symptomatic of a problem Rich.
My son has never stolen anything from me. He is allowed to drink beer socially
at home so drinking isn't a really big deal for him. His friends buy their
own liquor through older brothers and friends. He has had his share of wild
parties but I was always home at the time to keep an eye on things. We have
always had a sort of understanding in that he always told me what was going on
in his life and I never freaked at the truth, I wanted him to feel that there
was nothing he couldn't tell me. As far as respect for the law and authority
figures, ...some laws and authority figures do not deserve to be respected.
My sons use their own judgement in these matters as they have been taught to
and that judgement has paid off more than once. Occasionaly problems have
arisen but nothing that couldn't be worked out....and when I've been wrong or
over-reacted I'm not afraid to admit it.
Decisions regarding household finances are mine...its my house and my money and
(I feel) my right/responsibility. He will be young for such a short time and
(if things keep going the way they are in this world) it will be a very
difficult future for most of these kids. They usually come out of college
burdened with debt, their chances of buying a house and paying for it within
their lifetime seems rather bleak to me, they are under a great deal of
pressure. I believe that teenagers should spend a significant portion of their
lives having fun.
>>One rule would be above everything else: If a teen gets in trouble
>>due to somthing he did, "Well you made your bed, now lay in it.".
I totally disagree with this statement. To me a family is there when you
need them...thats the difference between family and everybody else in this
world. If you are not there when your teen is in trouble, where does he
turn, the street, friends, drugs? Everybody makes mistakes and everyone gets
into trouble once in awhile. Those who have help and support frequently learn
from their mistakes and go on to lead happy productive lives. Those who are
left stranded to muddle their way through alone sometimes compound those
mistakes into ruined lives. If my husband or mother or son or anyone I loved
got into trouble due to something he/she did (and isn't that how most of us
get into trouble) I would do everything I could to help. My boys know that
and seem to feel very secure about us as a family. Don't misunderstand me
though,...I don't take any crap from them and they know that too.
I believe that being a parent does not mean you go on a 21 year power/ego trip
where you are always right and always in control. Being a parent means that
you teach and allow your children to learn all of the skills necessary for
them to survive in environment/society they will have to live in. I personally
believe in ethics, integrity and honesty and I feel that my boys should and
do embody all of those qualities. I would not want a father or husband that
would not be there when I needed him....no matter what the reason and I believe
my boys will be the kind of fathers and husbands that will always be there for
their families,...protective and loving, but not afraid to tell a kid he is
wrong when he is wrong.
|
113.20 | If you have good kids there shouldn't be a problem | LILAC::MKPROJ | REAGAN::ZORE | Fri Jun 12 1987 17:38 | 45 |
| Sorry, someone snuck in under me. Reply .18 was refering to
.16 not .17.
.19 (Ms. Pare?) has a very valid point about making your bed
and laying in it. I spoke hastly and now find that I should have
conditioned that phrase. The teenage years are very much like
graduating from a tricycle to a two-wheeler. At first the 2 wheeler
has training wheels but eventually these come off. The first couple
of times these come off you run along side to catch 'em if they
fall. After a while they stop falling.
I never really meant that if a teen gets into trouble a parent
shouldn't help them out of it. I guess my feelings lay more in
the direction of teens (and adults) who habitually get into the
same trouble over and over. While I have no teens of my own yet
(I've 2 girls and 1 boy ranging in age from 3 months to 4 years),
I am the oldest of 6. My folks had no dicipline problems with me.
Child 2 did have his wild days but that consisted mostly of drag
racing the cops, carousing and such. Child 3 ran away with her
boy friend and married down south. That caused alot of pain at the
time and after she came home and had some unsettled years she finally
settled down. Child 4 is an alcoholic and he was the one who totaled
5 cars in one summer (not all the cars were ours). My parents kept
bailing him out and making excuses and lending money and etc...
He finally seems to be getting started on a straight life at the
age of 29(?). Child 5 ran away at 17 and she joined a motorcycle
gang (not club, gang, the kind that like to beat people up for kicks).
That story is still going on and at the age of 27 or 28 she's a
druggie and an alcoholic and she won't admit it. My mother is finally
seeming to come around and apply tough love. Mom has applied to
the courts to have custody of child 5's child (her grandson) and
the basic attitude seems to be that child 5 can go to hell. Child
6 is AOK thank God.
My basic feeling is that the first time childs 4 & 5 were arrested
it was a big mistake to run down at 3AM and bail them out. It
has been over 10 years of bailing people out, paying for drug rehab
(so we can get reduced sentences), driving to the airport at 2AM
to pick the kid up (who says her boyfriend is going to kill her
in a frantic phone call and then she doesn't show cause they make
up and my parents worry for the next 2-3 weeks whether she's dead
or alive and the next time she calls like nothing has happened!!!).
This is where I'm coming from.
I still say it but now I qualify it. "The first couple of times
you get into trouble for somthing I'll help out, HOWEVER! If it
becomes a habit baby then YOU made your bed, Now YOU lay in it".
Rich
|
113.21 | What would you do, Vern? | AMUN::CRITZ | Ya know what I mean, Vern | Mon Jun 15 1987 14:08 | 14 |
| One of the previous replys mentioned some extreme
measure. Well...,
My stepfather had this policy with his children (1 son,
1 daughter), which was implemented the day they graduated
from high school. Simply stated, they knew they were to
pack up and move out. Period. There was no discussion
about this, that or the other. They each simply packed
and moved within 24 hours of graduation.
I'm glad that policy did not affect my brother or me (although
we basically did the same thing, give or take a couple of months).
Scott
|
113.22 | | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! in Littleton Hills Mangler | Mon Jun 15 1987 18:59 | 5 |
| RE: .21
I think your stepfather was/is unreasonable.
mike
|
113.23 | stilll not on the question... | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Tue Jun 16 1987 00:25 | 21 |
| Pardon me if I have missed someone, but the only answers that
have really related to where we are as a family are Mary Pare's.
I have no intention of layin down arbitrary laws to my son, nor
are things around here anywhere near that serious. What I was looking
for was "how do parents connect with a reasonable young man of
post highschool and explain that what we want is 'share chores,
and shared information, and we are trying to make the transition
but we don't know how to tell him and convince him that this is
a case of how to share a household, not a case of giving him orders.
To further explain we are sending him to college in the fall - and
we are all trying to work out what is reasonable...
and again...he is a very reasonable person, but very sensitive,
what I want to learn to do is to convince him that we are willing
to let him be himself and yet let us all come to terms with what
is fair in a big family.
thank you all again for your answers
B
|
113.24 | Have you tried talking to him? | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Danger : I drive like you do! | Tue Jun 16 1987 10:36 | 23 |
|
Re -1:
It's been a while since I read this entire note, so excuse me if
I repeat someone.
By the sound of what you want to do, and how you would like to do,
the only suggestion that I can think of is to sit your son down
one evening for a family discussion. Not parent to son, but adult
to adult. Tell/ask him the same things you put in .23, if he truely
is a "reasonable young MAN" you should be able to discuss it openly
and come to a mutually agreeable settlement.
The trick is to deal with him as an adult, not the 15 year old brat
he was 2 years ago. (not to imply your son is a brat! :-)
This is how my parent always dealt with me and my older siblings,
and it worked wonders. Give it a try.
Good luck,
Clark.
|
113.25 | she's fighting to leave the nest . . . | WEBSTR::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Jun 16 1987 11:04 | 38 |
| Bonnie --
I haven't put this in before now because I wasn't sure how much it
applied to your situation, but I think I'll add it just on the chance
it's useful.
I recently had a brief running battle with my 13-year-old daughter over
how much she has to tell me about where she's going. She thought that
it was enough to tell me "I'm going out for a bike ride and I'll be
back in an hour"; I wanted to know which direction she was going and
who she was going with.
After a couple of nasty fights we got a calm moment to talk about it,
and she told me that having to tell me exactly where she was going
spoiled the whole point of getting out to herself. She wanted to be
able to head out in the direction she felt like riding and go where the
impulse took her. Usually it was just to a friend's house or to the
corner grocery.
I pointed out that while she's very grown up, independent,
tough-minded, and intelligent, she is only 13, and going out without
giving me any idea where she's going is unreasonably dangerous
(accident, breakdown, or injury, not to mention unwelcome attentions.)
We compromised: she will tell me the general direction she's going,
who she's with, when she'll be back, and a couple of the most likely
places she might stop. (They all sell ice cream.) If she starts
breaking any of these rules, I reserve the right to restore the
restrictions.
So far, no problem. Not only that, she's been telling me more on
her own.
A car is a much more serious matter, and I don't know where your
son is in the habit of going, so I don't know if there are any useful
parallels here or not.
--bonnie
|
113.26 | Here's another suggestion. | LILAC::MKPROJ | REAGAN::ZORE | Tue Jun 16 1987 12:57 | 10 |
| Maybe it would be helpful to explain to him your concerns,
say you've asked others about it and then show him a printed copy
of this note and all the replies. Just a suggestion.
Rich
PS. I can't help but think that in the final analysis, you are the
only one who is really capable of coming up with the solution,
you've lived with this person for 17 years and know better than
any of us what makes him tick.
|
113.27 | ...My best friend, Ma | NRADM3::MITCHELL | george | Tue Jun 16 1987 17:01 | 14 |
| Most of the replies have a message for you. The point being THEY
ARE ALL DIFFERENT. Ya gotta treat them as such. Some are responsible
at 13 others are are 26 going on 12
Much of their development is formulated by the parents some by
siblings and others by the "cats they swing with". Don't be
surprised if the Peer force wins out. Get to know all their
friends and pick the WORSE one...thats the one they'll chose
as their best friend....GUARANTEED!!!
....and don't try to discourage their association, It'll only
strengthen the bond between them. Your next task is to reform
the "WORSE" friend. So you see you got lots of fun ahead.
___GM___
|
113.28 | Some day we'll look back on this and laugh? | SPIDER::PARE | | Tue Jun 16 1987 17:10 | 13 |
| Bonnie,
I just had one of "those talks" with my kid too.
"graduation is over, party-time is over, it's time to
locate some roommates and make plans for college next
year, ... UNDERSTAND"
I got the appropriate number of sighs but he seems to know I'm serious
and he (thank you God) appears ready and willing to settle back
down after post-high_school_graduationitis.
(sigh, ... and the next one is only sixteen)
:-)_mary
|
113.29 | Different Perspective | UHCLEM::NIKEL | | Thu Jul 16 1987 10:58 | 20 |
| Bonnie,
I am 21 and have been going to college for the past 3 years.
I have some input for your problem. When I was that age my parents
were to constricting. In the long run it did pay off because I
have been a responsible individual throughout my life since then.
Basically what I have to say is if your son lives with you or gets
basic support from you (i.e. $$) you have the right to request basic
things from him. I see no reason why he could not do some chores
around the house to help out. Afterall he helps live in the house
why can't he work in it too. A family can not function without
mutaul cooperation. As far as the car goes, no car keys until
you get some sort of answer on where he is going and approximately
when he will get back. If he is going to be late just have him
ring you to tell you when he will be in. Easy as that! These we
rules that I followed and things worked out fine for me and my parents,
and whenever I go home for a weekend those rules are followed even
today.
Ron.
|
113.30 | thanks | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Thu Jul 16 1987 13:28 | 9 |
| Thank you Ron,
Things have improved tremendously around the house....it turned
out that a major part of the problem was that he was working too
many hours and not getting enough sleep! We all sat down and developed
some workable guide lines when he was rested and haven't had
any further problems.
Bonnie
|
113.31 | 6 months later | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 16 1987 19:28 | 7 |
| This is a sort of a follow up. Our son is due home in 5 days from
his first semester in college. He is carrying a B average at
Wesleyan going into finals. When he came home at Thanksgiving we
were delighted with the thoughtful mature person that he has been
growing into. I guess I will just expect that kids turn a bit weird
right at high school graduation when I come to dealing with his
siblings.
|
113.33 | | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sun Jan 03 1988 08:02 | 1 |
| really, how? :-)
|