Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,187
To me yes. Growing up in a divorced home our punishments carried over. We had our video games taken away for a year. Dad was a dead beat so we hardly saw him that year but my mother made it very clear that just because we were at dad's didn't mean the punishment was gone. Just like if we got in trouble at dad's and were grounded for a week but since we were only at dad's for no more than two days he would tell mom what we had done (usually brothers fighting) and what their punishment was and mom would make sure if was finished.
Punishments not being carried over is what creates the well I'm going to live with dad or I'm going to live with mom arguments later.
To me, this is overly controlling. Part of adjusting to divorce is accepting that you no longer have control over what happens in the other parent's house and that the other parent has the right to set the rules for his time. Neither parent gets to dictate to the other.
This is a parenting issue, not an allowance issue. Would this be an argument if the parents were still together? If the mom had to buy a suit because the child left them at home, what would happen? How would you discipline the child? Regardless of the parents divorce, the child needs to be treated consistently.
Of course it wouldn't be an issue if the parents were still together because in a marriage all the money comes out of the same pot. A father choosing a financial punishment that will effect his own household is different from a non-custodial parent imposing a financial punishment that will impact only the custodial parent's household.
