And just to clarify- I had this EXACT same thing happen this year and handled it in a COMPLETELY different way. My nine year old dd was caught snooping at grandma and granpa's house and then claimed to have been looking for something else in the room. I could tell by the look on her face that her lie was because of embarrassment at being caught doing something wrong- she didn't want to diminish the adults view of her. When I hugged her and told her about the time I snooped when I was about her age and my mom chimed in with her own snooping story from childhood my daughter's fears were comforted and she knew she could be honest. She came clean 100% and she was reassured that our love is unconditional. We also talked about why its disappointing when kids snoop and why they shouldn't do it. We explained that as grown ups our fun isn't from getting presents that its from giving them and we get joy from seeing her face when she gets her Christmas surprise. She completely understood this reasoning and was very apologetic, promising not to snoop anymore- which she hasn't!
I'm sure there are those who believe I was too lienient and that's okay- like I said, we are all just trying to do the best we can in this very moment and only time will tell what choices were the right ones. All I know is that TODAY I feel good about the way I handled it. I think my daughter learned not only not to snoop but why it is important in the context of respecting other people's pleasure as much as her own.
Honestly, I have NEVER understood the whole State Secret of Xmas Presents thing. Maybe because I was not raised with the Santa tradition, but I just don't see the point of all the obsession about secrecy. What on earth difference does it make if the recipient finds out ahead of time what gift he or she is getting?
DH and I have been married for nearly 20 years, and this issue caused the ONLY real fight we have ever had in that time. He went ballistic last year and tried to do this to DS after he opened some boxes before Christmas, and I essentially said over my dead body. He is obsessive about the secrecy thing, and I refuse to enforce it.
I hate surprises. Always have, always will. DS is the same way. DH knows this, but he's still obsessive about the whole "you MUST be surprised on Christmas, no matter how miserable that makes you" thing.
When I was a kid, I perfected the art of Christmas snooping. I'm not sure if my parents ever knew that I did it, but even if they had, they wouldn't have gotten angry over it -- it was just a game. Gifts sat out in the living room for weeks, and we all shook and prodded the boxes trying to guess what was in them -- I just took it a step further and unwrapped them at 3 am. I also took pride in restoring the wrapping perfectly to its original condition, and I'm danged good at that. (I still get practice, because my relatives have a habit of sending battery-operated gifts to the kids without the batteries, so I open the boxes and put them in before Christmas morning. It's impossible to tell that they have been opened. I use a needlenosed Exacto knife, an old credit card, and a crafter's glue stick.) I'm famous for this in my family; it is now widely known that I can open ANY box without a trace, and my relatives like to come up with all kinds of wacky ****ytraps to try to stop me. Never works.
A cornered 9 yo who knows that he is between a rock and a hard place will ALWAYS lie to try to get out of it if you give him a chance to. I am betting anything that that woman is just like my DH about the sanctity of The Secret, and he figured he was doomed anyway, so what did he have to lose? Kids that age are not logical that way, especially with a furious parent looming over them.
I'd punish my child for lying, but not that way. By returning the gifts she made it more about what he saw than how he reacted to being caught.
I will stick up for her and also state that not everyone in the world is obviously as sensitive as you clearly are.
Some times people don't just hold onto stuff and let it turn them into emotional messes.
For example..... I was bullied a lot at school. Do I use this as an excuse for everything that goes wrong in my life. No it was at school it was a long time ago and I have moved on. Did it affect me yes, but I used it in a positive way. Some people don't let it run their life while others will let it cloud everything they do.
The majority of mothers on here, know their kids well. If the child is a sensative type of child then I suspect the punishment would have been different. As a parent, the majority of us, do what we know will have the best lesson teaching effect on said child.
Years ago I was working as a shop assistant and a mother brought her child in who had taken something from the shop, she made him return it in person and say sorry. How would you deal with that situation, that would be public humilation according to you. The boy was so upset about 1. being caught and 2. having to return it but I bet he never ever does it again.
Kirsten
I had my oldest daughter do that when she was 3 years old. She kept asking for candy in the store and I kept telling her no. Then when we got to the car she pulls this candy out of her pocket and asked me to open it. Needless to say she took it back into the store and gave it back and apologized. But I don't think that is the same thing as snooping for Christmas gifts. By taking something from the store with out paying for it, she was breaking the law. Snooping does not however break any laws... rules maybe, but not laws.
the mom realy set the kid up to fail and all because she was too lazy to wrap the presents. My kids would have to take off the wraping to know what it is. Now THAT would be a big no no to open the gift early.