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MomBirthmomStepmom
02-15-2006, 07:04 PM
Okay, I know I've posted before about my DSS's (10yo) forgetfullness.. Well, I gotta post the whole story, and really hope I can get some help.

DSS is a loser of jackets. That's his main issue, jackets.

For Christmas he got 3 new jackets. Later that day, he went with biomom for and overnight. By the 26th, the first jacket was gone. Gone forever. He apparantly left it at a 7-Eleven somewhere. *sighs8

Two weeks into January, he leaves one at school. Looks for it for 2 weeks before we finally accept, it must be gone. (hasn't been seen since, so, it most likely is gone forever).

A week or so after that, we buy him another new one (cheap, just something to keep him warm), and FOUR DAYS later, you guessed it, GONE.

Now, SO at this point decides to 'ground' DSS from video games for a week if he finds the jacket the next day, and 2 weeks if he does not. Well, he found it, and all was well. He was grounded for 1 week.

Well, the day before his grounding was up, he loses it yet again. SO had told DSS if he lost is again, it was another week. (I had *nothing* to do with this discipline, this was completely SO. I'm the step-mom, so I try my best to just support etc)

Well, that jacket has been missing for 7 days now, and is most likely also gone forever *sighs*

We've agreed no more jackets this year. He's used up his lot, and that's that. (he DOES have a rain jacket, and a pull over sweatshirt still, so please don't think we're sending him out with nothing!!)


Well, he's been bringing home the pullover (older, warn out looking, we're no longer letting him take the new rain jacket he got for XMas to school, it's a priviledge to wear the nicer jacket etc), which is good, and tonight is his last night of being grounded. He's been doing well, so tomorrow I was gonna let him off the hook with chores, and as soon as homework was done, and dinner was done, was gonna let him play video games (as long as I had SO's okay with this, of course).

What happens today? Oh, no, not that jacket, that would've been to obvious!! Today, it's HOMEWORK!! Completely forgot it, left it at school!!!


UGGGGHHHH!!

What are we to do?

I haven't gotten a hold of SO yet to speak with him about this, but I really truly feel like, he's already being 'punished' by SO for not being more responsible about his things, should we continue the 'grounding' for a bit, or should we just go on and brush this off...? I wouldn't be so aggrivated about this if it wasn't for the fact that he's currently being punished for not being responsible about his things etc... (just to give you an idea about where I stand. Otherwise, it isn't overly important in the grand scheme of things, IMO)

How can we help him with this? In the past taking away video games helped, and that first week, it seemed to help some as well... But now, he seems like he just can't care less...

Anyone else deal with something similar?

(and if at all possible, please noone flame about my SO's choice to 'ground', or my use of the word 'punish', it was the best I could come up with at the time. Also, please don't flame about my choice to support SO's decision.)




LDSmomma6
02-15-2006, 08:40 PM
I think grounding is perfectly reasonable. It's not beating, KWIM? We ground our children. There are different groundings for different things. One grounding is that they may loose the game box for a week, one may be no dessert for 2 days, one may be no friends over after school for 5 days. And the list goes on. But that's not the issue...

The issue is...

:Hug Just know you aren't the only one with a child like this. :hug

aisraeltax
02-15-2006, 08:47 PM
how old is he? my ds1 (15) has been losing jackets for years...since around 12 or so. i don't have any advice for you. homework is another problem. he got a B- on his math this last report card but that was b/c he got an F in the homework area...whch means that he handed NOTHING in!!! how can you get a B- when you hand in zero homework?
im subscribing to your thread in case someone much wiser than me will answer your question.
good luck
rach

sunnysideup
02-16-2006, 09:37 AM
That's a lot of jackets to lose, must be so frustrating for all of you! We have faced similar issues at our house. It's like they get into a habit of forgetting. It's helped me to think that even though a young teen can seem so grown up in many ways, they are still kids and there are many life skills they have not learned yet. It's our job to teach them these life skills. Punishing a child for not learning something really doesn't help them learn. What worked for us was to keep on top of the problem for a few weeks. Every time they return home you ask if they have the jacket, if not they go back to get it. Help him get in the habit of thinking about the jacket. My daughter used to forget her homework often, it helped her to write "homework" on the back of her hand. The important thing is to not pass judgement on the child. This is just a skill they have not learned yet, not a personality trait.

LotusBirthMama
02-16-2006, 11:07 AM
We are going thru this right now w/ our 8 yo son...It is frustrating to say the least. DH is more pissed off about it and tends to berate ds when he loses stuff and forgets things...I wish I had some sage advice...

On a lighter note, DS had left his coat in school for about three days straight (how, in a New England winter is beyond me). He knew he was going to be in trouble so he snatched a coat out of lost and found on his way out to the bus. OK...but it was pink and lined with leapard fur...I'm still not sure what he was thinking!

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 12:22 PM
Oh, this is nothing new. This has been going on for at least 2 years... It just so happens that 3 jackets in 5 weeks was our breaking point.



. Punishing a child for not learning something really doesn't help them learn. What worked for us was to keep on top of the problem for a few weeks. Every time they return home you ask if they have the jacket, if not they go back to get it. Help him get in the habit of thinking about the jacket. My daughter used to forget her homework often, it helped her to write "homework" on the back of her hand.

We do this EVERYDAY and have for almost an entire year (not the writing on the hand, but notes in his bag, and in his lunch, and remind when dropping him off, and ask the second we see him, if he's not wearing it etc etc). It's not working. So, really, how is THAT teaching him anything either? It's pretty much that we're just gonna keep remembering, and he's gonna keep forgetting, and life will go on as normal. Umm, not a great lesson, IMO. (not at this point, not anymore, after doing this for so long).

In the last year total, he's lost a TOTAL of 7 jackets and a lunchbag. (along with other toys etc etc) But 3 in 5 weeks just pushed us too far.

We don't have the means to constantly replace jackets. His grandmother does however, and up until we put a stop to it last year, she just blindly replaced them over and over with no consequence. So not only was there noone telling him 'you NEED to be responsible for your things', he was getting rewarded with nice brand new expensive jackets... Thanks grandma!! I think THAT taught him something that we're now trying to UNteach him.

So, we came out and told her, no new jackets etc etc. She called me yesterday and was also herself shocked about 3 jackets in 5 weeks, and has actually been well as far as not 'rewarding' the irresponsibility anymore...



Last night, because of the homework, he needed to finish his chores, and we decided he could not watch one of his favorite shows on TV (American Idol).. We're still not certain what to do today, but will have him do the homework (even though tomorrow starts a 4 day weekend), and will probably have him do some chores to work on responsibility.

I think that's our main issue here. He was basically raised that he didn't need to be responsible, and in the end, he'd be nicely rewarded FOR being irresponsible... How do you fix that at 10 years old??

sweetfiend
02-16-2006, 01:23 PM
I have to say our 17 year old neighbor is exactly like this. He can't remember his belongings EVER!!! For example, we bring him home from school and say, "Don't forget your backpack." So the backpack makes it as far as our backyard. Another reminder--it makes it into our house. Another reminder--there it is on our front step. Anonther reminder--there it is in front of our community mailboxes! I'm not sure how he does manage to get it as far as our car. His mother complains that he is so forgetful and she can't figure out what to do--and then she walks out of our house leaving behind her mail, her coffee cup, the movie she came over to borrow, etc. Once I watched her step out of her shoes to pluck a weed from our garden and then step back onto the path and walk away without her shoes! But she can't for the life of her figure out what's wrong with her kid!!

I'm not saying that you or his dad are forgetful, but I do think that this behavior is as much genetic as it is learned (perhaps more so). I think you have pretty well proven that he can't be punished into remembering.

Bummer that I haven't the vaguest idea how to help. But I did want to say that not all bevhavoirs are learned.

sunnysideup
02-16-2006, 01:32 PM
I think that's our main issue here. He was basically raised that he didn't need to be responsible, and in the end, he'd be nicely rewarded FOR being irresponsible... How do you fix that at 10 years old?? It is really hard to unlearn bad habits that have gone on this long. And, it sounds like you've tried keeping on him about this to no avail. Have you tried just ignoring it?

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 01:48 PM
It was pretty much completely ignored up until early last year. (other than being bought new jackets, it was ignored)

Last year, the family grew, SO and DSS, became SO, myself, DSS and DD...lol So we really just couldn't let him think we could afford to just keep replacing things. (we were also at a point of trying to get grandma to stop replacing etc, and we couldn't afford it. But we also felt it wasn't her place to do so)

There were times where we wanted to simply say 'fine, you lose it, you don't have it', and send him out without his jacket, in hopes that maybe he'd learn then. But, we couldn't go through with it. We didn't feel right sending him out with no jacket when it was chilly enough to see your breath etc etc. (or ANY other time, when we normally would).

We've tried being the role model. Like, everytime we leave somewhere, stop at the door and say things like 'okay, what do I need, keys, purse etc etc', no matter where we are. Trying to teach to stop and think before just up and running out. (btw- he has frequently left things like shoes, backpack etc, when his dad picks him up at someone's house, he just runs out the door without a second thought, so we've tried working on that)..


The only good thing, is that, well, DD gets upset if she even takes one step out of the house without remembering something of hers..lol She's doing well remembering..lol


So, from here, I don't know what to do.

We have decided to talk with him tonight. Nothing bad, nothing demeaning etc, but point out that he's lost several nice jackets, a nice lunchbox, a couple of of video game times, things he will not get back etc. And that maybe it's time for him to start thinking about that etc. Like, actually verbally remind him of the things he will never get back, and how very preventable that is etc...

Kirsten
02-16-2006, 03:21 PM
There were times where we wanted to simply say 'fine, you lose it, you don't have it', and send him out without his jacket, in hopes that maybe he'd learn then. But, we couldn't go through with it. We didn't feel right sending him out with no jacket when it was chilly enough to see your breath etc etc. (or ANY other time, when we normally would).
We have decided to talk with him tonight. Nothing bad, nothing demeaning etc, but point out that he's lost several nice jackets, a nice lunchbox, a couple of of video game times, things he will not get back etc. And that maybe it's time for him to start thinking about that etc. Like, actually verbally remind him of the things he will never get back, and how very preventable that is etc...
Have you read Parenting with Love and Logic? It is by Jim Fay and Foster Cline. I took a class at our local hospital on L & L. Really good.

One thing it teaches is that only one of us needs to worry about it. If you are willing to worry, keep track, ask, remind him about his coat, he knows he doesn't really need to spend any energy on it himself - you will take care of it. If you COMPLETELY let it go - no reminders, no looks, absolutely nothing - then he will, by the consequence of being cold, start thinking about it himself.

Also learned that if we talk about (nag, whatever you want to call it) something negative - they forgot their coat for example - the child isn't thinking for one minute "I should remember my coat next time". What he IS thinking is what jerks we are for pointing out his mistakes and rubbing his nose in them once again. Or maybe he is thinking that he can really get you and dad riled up with this issue - his power trip.

It says that you are in southern California? How cold does it get? How long is he out in it? If it is just walking two blocks to the bus stop, and he lost/forgot his coat again, he will not frostbite in those five minutes. But the cold will teach him much faster than reminding, nagging, grounding ever will IMO. I don't think it is cruel; you are not sending him to the ski slopes for six hours in a pair of jeans and a tee shirt. He is also not two or four; he is ten. Let the natural consequences of losing/forgetting his coat do the teaching.

Also, I would not buy more coats or allow gramma to. I think instead of grounding him from xyz, I'd do two things. I'd let him buy a new coat with his allowance/birthday money. The second thing is not very love and logic-y because it is not linked to the issue, but you could also allow him to play Gamecube (or whatever his thing is) on the days he comes home from school with his coat.

I think that if you and SO can tough it out and let him be cold a little, the issue would solve itself. If he loses his lunchbox, he takes lunch to school in a paper bag or gallon ziplock. If he loses a videogame, he doesn't have that videogame to play anymore. Just bite your tongue and don't lecture about it. If he complains about it, be sympathetic - "that's a bummer" in an honest voice - but nothing else.

And for the record, I think it is great that you are supporting your SO in what he does with his ds. Stepparenting must be tough but it sounds like you are doing really well with it. Good luck with the coat problem.

aisraeltax
02-16-2006, 03:41 PM
i took a class kind of like that and did stop nagging him about it, but he still lost jackets. i had to buy one this year and he actually still has it...i don't think he's going to lose it b/c last year he went almost 1/2 the year w/ a jacket from Goodwill b/c i refused to buy a third or fourth jacket, kwim???

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 03:45 PM
Okay, gonna try to touch on a few things. Yes, we're in Southern California, but I can't tell you how surprised people are by how chilly it gets in the mornings. It has been between 30-45 where I am right now in the mornings. This week the high was 60, which for us is feeling chilly (especially after this weekend it was up to 85).

He stands outside of school for sometimes up to half an hour. On days that SO takes him to his (SO's) mom's before school, it's a several block walk to get to the school (I wanna say 5 or 6).

I will have to talk to SO about the no jacket thing. In the past I was much more for it (oh well, if he loses it, he goes without), but grandma is SO's mother, and if her behavior gives you any inkling of how he was raised, you might get the picture..lol So, he just thought it was plain evil, and convinced me of that fact honestly. I also think for him he was worried I was simply trying to be the 'evil step-mother', we're working on those insecurities too..lol)

We have stopped the jacket buying and have told everyone else to do so as well. I have said if someone else buys one, it goes back, but my SO thinks that's rude as it would be a 'gift', I think it's rude to give someone something when you were asked specifically not to, lol, but that's a whole other post...lol

Of course, with it slowly becoming spring, the problem will go away until school starts up again...lol

As for the lunchbox, he takes the ugly brown paper bags now, with no chance of another lunch box until he pays for it himself...lol


I'm curious today to see if he comes home with both his jacket AND the homework from yesterday...lol

Will probably update.

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 03:48 PM
i took a class kind of like that and did stop nagging him about it, but he still lost jackets. i had to buy one this year and he actually still has it...i don't think he's going to lose it b/c last year he went almost 1/2 the year w/ a jacket from Goodwill b/c i refused to buy a third or fourth jacket, kwim???
While I would go for this, SO and grandma, would not. Grandman would take pity and take him out without asking us, and buy him something new and expensive, and SO would simply accept kindly because 1, 'we can't tell other people what gifts to give us' *rolls eyes*, and 2, WE aren't payi9ng for it, so what's the big deal?...

Although, I will admit, the longer it goes on, the more willing SO seems to be with trying a different approach..lol (as in, this is the first time EVER DSS has been grounded, that is how upset SO has become over the loss of all these jackets)

So maaaaaybe there's hope! Wish me luck :)

Apricot
02-16-2006, 04:03 PM
Maybe part of the problem is that he just doesn't get cold? Perhaps he doesn't need a jacket?

There are those guys I know that wear shorts year-round. Presumably, they were kids once, too?

Otherwise, I would suggest that he have as much structure as possible - always take the same # of things to school, have the same afterschool program, have the same # of binders, pencils, etc. so he doesn't have to remember what he brought *Today* but instead remember one supply list.

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 04:11 PM
Oh this kid shivers when it's 70 inside..lol He gets cold MUCH faster than the average person...lol


Honestly, we CANNOT make it so he does the same things everyday. We also CANNOT make it so he takes a jacket everyday, that would include sending him with one on days of 100 degree heat, and well, I'm sure you can see where that would lead (I;d probably lose MY jacket under that circumstance as well..lol)

As for the same afterschool activity. Impossible. We have one car, and after school he either walks to the grandma's (and either spends time there or gets driven home, depending on her day/work schedule), or his biomom picks him up for either 2 hours or 5 hours depending on HER schedule. We've worked on a MORE structured plan, but peoples lives change, and we can't stop that.

However, this summer we'll be moving to where we can walk to and from school, and that won't be MUCH of an issues except the days his mom will get him. But that won't be for another 6 months.


Thank you for the suggestion, I do truly appreciate each and every one. But yeah, with only 1 car and crazy gas prices and an SO who works a half hour away (so I can't drop him off and keep the car... can't afford that much gas!!), it limits what we can do, regarding after school structure.

(which is also why we can't simply say 'hey do you have your jacket' right away, cause we can't go get him at school)

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 04:14 PM
have the same # of binders, pencils, etc. so he doesn't have to remember what he brought *Today* but instead remember one supply list.
Oh and he loses the pencils, sharpeners, erasers etc etc etc as well...lol So that doesn't work either..

Apricot
02-16-2006, 04:29 PM
Ah, that makes sense. Poor kid - frequently loses his jacket and he especially hates to be cold. I understand why his grandma kept buying jackets. Not that I agree with it, but I understand.
No matter how much you try to arrange things to help him, there are a lot of adults in your son's life with other ideas and other plans and other needs. Maybe he'll be outgrow it?

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 04:29 PM
Well, he's home. Remembered his jacket, and did the homework at school.

But while I was putting his laundry away, realized, some of his PANTS are missing :lol I asked where they are 'I dunno'... *sighs* PANTS!

So yeah. I think it's also time to have a talk with grandma and biomom about when he sleeps over their houses etc.

Altair
02-16-2006, 04:30 PM
Have you talked to his teachers about created a behavior plan and expectation checklist?

There are many children who do not NATURALLY have organizational skills and need to to taught each, point by point. You can change your mindframe from punishment to teach. Not naturally developing organizational skills is not something that a punishment will fix. Is there a chance he has mild ADHD or ADHD shadow tendencies? (even without hyperactivity?) Often, kids with shadows of ADHD need extremely explicit organizational training. One of the teachers in my school has adult ADHD and he is contantly teaching us how many kids do not have these skills and how we can best teach them.

I would come up with a few plans on your own and then have a conference with his teacher regarding implementation. Here are some things I would do as a teacher:

- create a laminated "Expectation book" that he carries with him at all times. It can be on index cards and kept in his pocket, or even smaller and kept in a badge holder on a string around his neck... or just in a book that goes from desk to bookbag and home every day. In the book, put in a lot of digital pictures of him doing the things each page says. For each "chapter" focus on a new skill. tell him what he needs to do in each scenerio. (ex: "chapter 1. In the mornings, I walk into my classroom and hang up my coat. (check box) Next, I unpack my school bag and put my homework in the red bin. (check box)... etc.) Put a big box next to each sentence so that each day he can check the box (dry erase marker). For the chapter involving leaving the school, I would include a space for his teacher to sign, verifying that everything is in the right place.

The point of all this is to foster a "mental checklist" everytime he leaves somewhere. People with good organizational skills naturally do this, while other people leave places without thinking back to what they need first.

Depending on the child, if I felt like i REALLY needed to, I might attach a reward to getting all checks all day. I'd prefer not to though. You're not teaching independent organizational skills if it's tied to reward/punishment, but some kids do need that extra motivator. I would NOT punish as a result of not having checks, that will breed negativity into the system.



My point is that you need to start from the ground up and have a VERY explicit, organized system to start out just to teach him those skills. As time goes by and he is successful with the system, you wean him off of parts. If the system isn't working, you find a new one. he NEEDS to be taught these skills, every kid CAN be taught anything, you just need to find the way that clicks.

hope that helps.

Starr
02-16-2006, 04:31 PM
Does he get an allowance? Maybe he needs to save or earn his own money and have you take him to whatever store he wants and he can look at, browse, and pay for his next one. That way he knows for one they aren't cheap and will remember what he had to do to get one.

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 04:33 PM
Ah, that makes sense. Poor kid - frequently loses his jacket and he especially hates to be cold. I understand why his grandma kept buying jackets. Not that I agree with it, but I understand.
No matter how much you try to arrange things to help him, there are a lot of adults in your son's life with other ideas and other plans and other needs. Maybe he'll be outgrow it?
Could you explain it to me, cause i DON'T understand...lol He ALWAYS had MORE at home, he's NEVER had less than 3 jackets at a time... So WHY did she continue to constantly buy him new ones, if it was just a heated car-drive away to his others at home?? Seriously. To me, it was disrespecting something we specifically asked, and not just to be mean, but to help him to learn that things aren't always gonna be magically replaced in life at someone else's expense...

Was I really wrong to think/feel that way? (be honest)

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 04:40 PM
Have you talked to his teachers about created a behavior plan and expectation checklist?

There are many children who do not NATURALLY have organizational skills and need to to taught each, point by point. You can change your mindframe from punishment to teach. Not naturally developing organizational skills is not something that a punishment will fix. Is there a chance he has mild ADHD or ADHD shadow tendencies? (even without hyperactivity?) Often, kids with shadows of ADHD need extremely explicit organizational training. One of the teachers in my school has adult ADHD and he is contantly teaching us how many kids do not have these skills and how we can best teach them.

I would come up with a few plans on your own and then have a conference with his teacher regarding implementation. Here are some things I would do as a teacher:


First, I'm the step-mother, not legally yet though. So technically, dad's live-in girlfriend. I raise the child, feed him, wash his clothing, pay for his food with my paycheck, BUT I have no rights to to the parent-teacher thing :( I could go with SO, however, we have no childcare for the kids, and most times, he just goes alone.

I have asked him countless times 'ask DSS's teacher about this', please help with this etc etc... In the end, HE does not think that's the way to go, and legally I have not one leg to stand on. I can call the school all I want, but I'm not mom, dad, or even recognized step-parent :( I NEED to go through SO, and well, that doesn't work.


Same for bringing up ADHD. I've brought this up COUNTLESS times as well. SO feels that I'm attacking him as a father when I do. That I'm telling him his son is defective etc etc. See how far THAT gets me? lol But again, I cannot get him to a dr etc. :(

Although, yesterday grandma even asked me if I thought he had ADHD!! I was SHOCKED!! So I told her exactly what I just told you guys about SO thinking I'm attacking his parenting, and asked if she could bring this up with SO. I think he'd deal with it better coming from her, or knowing that someone who has ALWAYS been in DSS"s life is saying it too, and not just the 'evil step-mother' (see how that HORRIBLE label is making my life HELL, and how I really feel is preventing SO from seeing the VALID concerns I have for his child. And no, SO NEVER uses that term, but it's how I feel he thinks the way he talks sometimes about how I'm 'attacking his son' and 'attacking his parenting' :( )

upset-rant over...lol Sorry about that.

This has just been going on for so long, and I feel so completely helpless and useless. I'm not a legal parent at all to this child, so there's only so much I can do before I have to pass it on to SO and simply HOPE he understands where I'm coming from :(




And to answer one question. He USED to get an allowance, which was earned by completely chores. He would, however, complete mayeb 1/4 of the chores, and expect the full allowance. So, there were issues there, and there's not been an allowance since.

Apricot
02-16-2006, 04:55 PM
She was disrespecting you, but I feel for the kid - always loosing things, can't keep track even when he tries, and COLD. I don't think you're wrong. The loving thing, the thing that helps him later in life, is to keep him warm, but not buy him new jackets. The thoughtfully loved COLD child is wearing one of grandma's old sweatshirts to return to her later. The loved (but someone didn't think it through) COLD child is wearing a new jacket from grandma.

I've heard some financial gurus suggest a 2 part allowance and 2 part chore list. One part of the allowance and the chores are for being a member of the family and one part of each is for performance.
I'll give an example. A 10 year old might get $10 available for every two weeks.
He gets $5 no matter what he does around the house
He does chores like make his bed, sort his laundry, and put his dishes in the dishwasher for no money. He loses privledges but not money for not doing these. These are designed to lessen his actual footprint on the house and take care of himself. The goal is to have the 14-16 year old doing his own stuff, laundry, dishes, etc. so he is prepared for life. With love and care and acknowledgement that he is learning and is not expected to be perfect.
He has the option to get up to $5 more if he does above and beyond chores, like weeding or washing the car or whatever you actually need done.

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 05:03 PM
Thanks for all the replies. I really do appreciate it, and it's helping to get it off my chest.

I just sent SO a long email about how we ALLOW DSS to leave clothing and things at people's houses, and how I'm now feeling guilty that we've been enabling this behavior and then go and punish him for it. I don't feel like that was the right thing to do.

I also went on this tangent (which, in hindsight, probably wasn't the best) about how by next week, I'd like that to change. I want all clothing etc left at others' houses home, and that when he leaves things he will no longer have them. Perhaps start a good will box, or a box in which he can slowly earn them back. *sighs* I probably shouldn't have gone on that rant, and have a feeling SO will probably feel I'm attacking DSS again, and know that things WON'T be changing..

I'm just having a very hard time sitting on the sidelines, and feeling like SO doesn't care to hear some of my suggestions for help, and then gets frustrated when the same old same old isn't working... Or he'll listen, and then never put into action because 'well, MY mom can spoil him as much as she wants, nevermind if it's undermining me as a parent' (which he doesn't see it that way, but I truly do).


(see my issues with the MIL? lol I love her, she's sweet and generous, but I really do think she's believes she's the superior parent, even to her grandchildren, like 'well, grandma says so, so it's goes over mom and dads head')

Sorry, lots of off topic rants coming out here...lol

Transitions
02-16-2006, 05:03 PM
My ds was forgetting too. Until I pinned on his shirt like a kindergartener *dont forget jacket/homework and he was totally embarassed..He doesnt foget it now! :lol

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-16-2006, 05:06 PM
My ds was forgetting too. Until I pinned on his shirt like a kindergartener *dont forget jacket/homework and he was totally embarassed..He doesnt foget it now! :lol
My intention isn't to humiliate him though, my intention is to help him learn that throughout life, when he loses things they're not gonna be magically replaced with someone else's money. RIght now, yes, he's young, and I get that, but what's so wrong with teaching him we live with modest means, now?

Honestly, I'm sure it did work for you, but your suggestion feels really uncomfortable to me, and I would feel pretty cruel to do that do DSS. I don't see any reason to humiliate him in front of his classmates/teachers etc.

Marsupialmom
02-17-2006, 12:42 AM
I think the other lady's said alot about the jacket. I personally would make him replace the item(s).

As for the pencils and erasers........I am 32 years old and I have that issue! I don't send my kids to school but I stock up in August. Having those so he doesn't have to take them back and forth is a good idea.

Transitions
02-17-2006, 09:46 AM
It wasnt that bad of a humiliation. And it worked. My ds is the most stubbornest person in the world, and he does not have any sort of disability as you say you may suspect in your step son(add/adhd) . I tried everything to help my ds (12) remember to bring his coats home. They cost money. He didnt care of the value of things. He bought himself a coat,lost it ,and shrugged his shoulders and said..youll buy me another one. :irked: My ds is the most popular boy in his class..so I thought..what would STICK in his mind to help him remember. And I came up with the pinning thing. I am sure nobody even cared it was there..but he did. And it stuck in his mind really good and he rarely forgets now. I know it may sound drastic, but IMO it wasnt mean it was right for my ds' personality, its the way he learns.

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-17-2006, 10:31 AM
I think the other lady's said alot about the jacket. I personally would make him replace the item(s).

As for the pencils and erasers........I am 32 years old and I have that issue! I don't send my kids to school but I stock up in August. Having those so he doesn't have to take them back and forth is a good idea.
Yeah, we don't care about the pencils etc, (those don't cost $20 a pop..lol) and every August I not only buy him which kind he asks for (1 box, of WHATever he chooses), I then buy 2-3 boxes of the cheaper plain old pencil. I do the same with erasers etc etc. I also buy 2 sharpeners. One for his bag (which he can keep at school, or in his bag), and one that stays here always (which the year before my DD managed to lose actually..lol)

So, when he loses the nice ones he picked out, it's back to the plain old ones I got, and he gets 1 at a time. I still have a nice stock of pencils, erasers and pencil grips in the pantry..lol

We know those things get lost, and are easily replaced, even on a tight budget. We're not concerned about that.


It's the things that we can't always just jump up and replace (sometimes $20 IS hard to come by for us, although our budget seems to be getting better)


He bought himself a coat,lost it ,and shrugged his shoulders and said..youll buy me another one.

This definitley is NOT the case with my DSS. He doesn't SAY those things, but we do know he expects them, that's what we're working on, the expectations. But he doesn't come right out and say 'oh well, you'll replace it'...

On a whole, he is a very good boy. Doesn't get in trouble, makes good grades etc. And with HIS personality, it would be horribly cruel for us to stick on a note on his chest like a 4 year old. He's shy and has a very hard time making friends, every little thing that makes him different, to HIM, sticks out in his mind, and he worries about it. (the other night at dinner, his worry of the day was about his height, and do I think he's average height, and how tall do I think he'll be etc etc).

I don't see the point in giving him something else to worry about. Especially not over a jacket. His self-esteem is MUCH more important.

aisraeltax
02-17-2006, 11:24 AM
i have to say he sounds a lot like my ds1, who does have ADD. we tried medication w/ him, but to his credit, he refused to take it (it did work to keep him more organized but now that all this research has come out liking it with heart disease, im glad we stopped it).
he has to learn on his own. i was struck by your comment that you are "enabling" him to be like this. It doesn't sound that way at all. Parents are concerned, and losing a jacket is a big thing, but a jacket is also necessary, so replacing it isn't the most horrible thing for you/others to do. What i did was based on finances as much as trying to prove a point, and i continue to do it. The year i bought a jacket for ds1 at Goodwill was after i had spent almost $100 on 2 jackets (almost $200). There was NO WAY i was going to shell out that kind of money again. Each year, i try to find a jacket that is nice for him and that he likes, but that i am not going to go crazy about if he loses. This year we went to LLBean outlet and he got a great jacket for $50. BUT, the jacket he WANTED was $150!!! IF he manages not to lose this jacket (so far so good) them maybe next year he will get what he wants.
i think there needs to be consequences, but i also think this is more of a boy thing than a girl thing...and i know if i tried to laminate anything for my son, he would just use it (after telling me how dorky it is). Im not saying its not a good idea (it is)...just that it wouldnt work with my son. He rebels against things like that and thats his personality....i don't try to change the fact that he is a minature me, thus a bit of a rebel. :)
good luck
rach

Transitions
02-17-2006, 11:31 AM
Well that definitely would not be good to use in your ss' case if he is shy. It was just a suggestion just like anyone else would suggest things on here to help or what worked for them. My ds' self esteem is WAY up there(sometimes too much lol) and he thinks he is ALL that a bag of potato chips...we ummm encouraged it too much in his younger years I think! Perhaps he is doing it for the attention he gets? I dont know. I know that it is normal for all preteens to start forgetting things..things like pencils, etc dont really matter but they do add up for sure! If he does have add/adhd he really cant help himself in forgetting things. Maybe try to give him an omega 3 supplement? And if he writes himself a list of *things to do* and stick it somewhere where he will remember things, it might help a bit. My son forgets homework...assignments, etc...and I asked him why and he said (and these are his words( *im too lazy to write it down mom!) :blah
I am sorry if I missed this in above posts, but where is the mom? Maybe he is thinking about *things* and forgetting other things. I hope you can work it out somehow. You did make me feel kinda bad about what I did for my sons forgetfulness, though I know I did what would work for his attitude and spirited personality. All children arent the same and I am sure you appreciate that. Good luck with your ss! :)

Marsupialmom
02-17-2006, 11:43 AM
have you checked out thrift stores for coats? Make him earn the money to buy them.

MomBirthmomStepmom
02-17-2006, 12:45 PM
have you checked out thrift stores for coats? Make him earn the money to buy them.
I definitley think this is our next step.

We have already gone down from all of his jackets being no less than like $40, to not going higher than $20 for them. (ya know, getting the less and less nice ones each time).

The last one he lost was one he picked out that cost $12...Nothing wonderful, but still, money just the same...

We have decided we will be buying no more this year, period. But I think next time, we'll be going the thrift store route, it's just too difficult to keep up with.

Thanks for the replies and suggestions, I'm not nearly as worked up about this today as I was when I posted. Thank you :)

HeatherHeather
02-17-2006, 01:14 PM
You know, I actually have a slightly different viewpoint on his forgetting. It sounds like there has been a lot of changes going on in his life the past few years. My 10 yo sometimes forgets her homework, her clothes at gymnastics, etc. This usually happens when she is feeling rushed, etc. I know on the days that her class at school is late in starting to pack up for the day, she forgets something. I can only imagine how difficult it is for your ds to remember what goes to which house, etc.

hotwings640
02-17-2006, 02:26 PM
I just wanted to post to tell you there is a light at the end of the tunnel.... I WAS this child! I was soooooo forgetful, it isn't even funny. One day I actually went to school.... without a shirt on!!!!!!!!!!! I forgot it!!! I had thrown a jacket over my bra while waiting for my shirt to dry and forgot to ever put it on, my dad had to drive me back home again (he taught in my school) so I could put a shirt on.

I used to always forget my homework, jackets, boots, etc. My parents nagged me and then finally by around age 10 or so they decided to let me understand natural conciquences to my actions. If I lost my jacket, I was going to have to wear some old nasty hand-me-down from my sister (or my parents too) until I came up with the money to buy my own. Or I might have some gross one from a thrift store that was UGLY. They wouldn't let me go without for more than a day or two because I lived in minnesota and it could be deadly to go without. If I left my boots somewhere, I couldn't play outside until I bought new ones and my feet would get wet anytime I went out. If I failed in school because of forgetting to do my homework, I would be grounded for that. After I had braces, my parents warned me that they would only buy 1 retainer, but that it was a requirment that I kept a retainer or else they would charge me for the full cost of the braces. I lost my retainer.... so guess what was my birthday pressent for my 16th birthday? Yep, a brand new retainer... that I actually still have today :wink

It was through all of this that I did eventually learn on my own how to organize my brain so that I don't lose the important stuff. My house is sooooo full of sticky notes that I make to myself, it is a bit ridiculous. So far I have never left my children anywhere either :lol So, just know that eventually he will find his own way. He will figure out that if he doesn't want whatever negative consequence there is for something, then there is a way he can keep from getting there. I wish you lots of patience though, it must be frustrating to deal with as a parent!

party_of_seven
02-19-2006, 02:39 PM
I agree with following the natural consequences route...even my 8yo has learned a great deal of responsibility this way. She is horrible about leaving library books outside and they get wet. She has had to earn the money to replace them herself and pay the fines. She doesn't leave library books outside anymore. We have a tight budget, and my kids know that if they intentionally destroy something or are clearly irresponsible with something of value that they have been warned about they will be the ones paying for the replacement....shoes, jackets, library books, bikes..etc.


I hope you find some balance and a solution to your situation.

Ooey
03-03-2006, 02:02 AM
I haven't read all the posts in this thread so forgive me if someone else has already suggested this...

My 11 year old brother has the same problem. Only for him, we're lucky if he makes it out the door of the house with the jacket on, which is not good when you live in a snowy tundra. This was really stressing out my mom, him always being without his jacket (and usually homework too) when there is no excuse for him not to have it, especially with everyone costantly reminding him. So I thought maybe if he got a jacket from his cool older sister *me* he would like it so much as to not lose it somewhere. For his birthday I went and had a sports jacket personalized with his name, his basketball team number and "MVP" on the front of it. It's a really "cool" looking jacket and he get's a lot of complements on it from other kids. He really loves it and wears it to school almost every day. Although some of his other jackets (and gloves, hats, backpacks) have continued to go missing, this jacket has stayed put for almost a year now.

Maybe after all this has calmed down a bit and he's been off punishment for it for a while, you can get him a nice jacket, something that he would consider cool, maybe something his favorite actor or singer would wear, and personalize it with his name.