I know "rules" are a hot button issue around here, but can I get some advice on how to help my son?
We have been keeping the front screen door locked so that the kids don't go out because frequently, when they do, the dog gets out. They can come and go out the back door, where they go from the kitchen to the mud porch to the outside. The dog doesn't get out.
All the kids know this, they have been reminded repeatedly, and for goodness sake, the screen door was LOCKED!
For some reason this really peeves Efram. He just UNLOCKED the front door and went out. He told me it didn't matter because the dog didn't get out this time.
Well, who cares?? The reason we are doing this is because the dog DOES get out, too frequently!!
Efram did not forget. He just doesn't like being told to go out the back door, so he decided he wouldn't.
We have a few other "rules" like this that are in place for very good reasons, such as "No playing in the cars when you're playing outside," in place because the neighbor's cat has been trapped inside twice, and "No jumping from six steps up into the landing" because we have a glass door at the bottom of the stairs (I even put a picture of a stick figure jumping with what the kids call a "skipper"--circle with line through it) on the glass.
Efram routinely jumps off the steps, and the one time I forgot to lock the car, he got right in.
Efram and I have a great relationship. He's not an angry or defiant kid. The main thing troubling him right now is his new understanding of adoption (he's come to realize that coming to us means something was left behind), so maybe he's acting out because of that, but I am concerned about this willful, deliberate defiance of our "rules."
In most other respects I am very relaxed. When I have a "rule," it's for a good reason. Maybe he doesn't really understand that reason, but ... these are safety issues. I'm not really willing to bend.
Help!
dm
We have been keeping the front screen door locked so that the kids don't go out because frequently, when they do, the dog gets out. They can come and go out the back door, where they go from the kitchen to the mud porch to the outside. The dog doesn't get out.
All the kids know this, they have been reminded repeatedly, and for goodness sake, the screen door was LOCKED!
For some reason this really peeves Efram. He just UNLOCKED the front door and went out. He told me it didn't matter because the dog didn't get out this time.
Well, who cares?? The reason we are doing this is because the dog DOES get out, too frequently!!
Efram did not forget. He just doesn't like being told to go out the back door, so he decided he wouldn't.
We have a few other "rules" like this that are in place for very good reasons, such as "No playing in the cars when you're playing outside," in place because the neighbor's cat has been trapped inside twice, and "No jumping from six steps up into the landing" because we have a glass door at the bottom of the stairs (I even put a picture of a stick figure jumping with what the kids call a "skipper"--circle with line through it) on the glass.
Efram routinely jumps off the steps, and the one time I forgot to lock the car, he got right in.
Efram and I have a great relationship. He's not an angry or defiant kid. The main thing troubling him right now is his new understanding of adoption (he's come to realize that coming to us means something was left behind), so maybe he's acting out because of that, but I am concerned about this willful, deliberate defiance of our "rules."
In most other respects I am very relaxed. When I have a "rule," it's for a good reason. Maybe he doesn't really understand that reason, but ... these are safety issues. I'm not really willing to bend.
Help!
dm






My 6yo gets like this sometimes too.


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