shellybaxter said:
As a child development center director I see some wonderful parents and I see some parents who struggle. Either way all of them do some things well and some things not so well. Some are totally frustrated, like the OP, with their children and want to know what they can do to change certain behaviors. Sometimes they listen and sometimes the answer is too difficult for them and they don't. Shelly
I'm no psychologist, just a mom, but what the struggle seems to come down to is these two perspectives: the ones motivated by a sense of entitlement (kids) and the ones motivated by a sense of obligation (parents).
In the posts in this thread, it seems the parents who have had the most
success are the ones who were able to
surrender their sense of obligation to give their family a "happy family experience at WDW" so that the child could be led to making a decision,
with consequences, of whether to continue to behave selfishly and take advantage of the parent's sense of obligation, or to consider what their own obligations may be and so act responsibly.
Whether the child makes the mature decision or the selfish one depends largely on their experience with consequences.
Someone else on this thread said that you must NEVER make a threat you don't intend to act on. This is so true, and my son knows it! The whiny stage didn't last long in our house. I'll leave full grocery carts, a camping trip, expensive outings, long line-ups, etc. to make my point. He learned to use words - not whines - to make a request, and that sometimes no matter how much you want something or how nicely you ask, the answer can still be "No." Still working on the "no questions asked" part about No
I've had my inevitable bad parent moments and some toughlove approaches that others have raised eyebrows at, but I will NOT let my son grow up with the huge liability of a sense of entitlement. There are already too many adults with that affliction (and such a large male proportion!

)
Nor do I want him to be ruled by a defeating sense of obligation to family (uh, that would be a lot of us women, it seems

)
I want him to know his rights
and his responsibilities, be an independent
and a caring person. Maybe even a normal, happy one (hey, it could happen

) I know that making sure there are consequences for bad behaviour and bad decisions won't make for happy family moments now, but it's part of my job as a parent. Whether he likes it or not he accepts it, he knows his job is to grow up into the kind of person
he wants to be.
Rewards and incentives can be useful in parenting (I'd say WDW is a pretty high-end reward!) but consequences are
essential. Sometimes that means acting on a previous warning to your child, sometimes that means leaving the child's unfinished task to remain unfinished so they experience what comes next (ie: toy pieces not picked up may get crushed or vacuumed).
It's hard on us as parents, but unfortunately for our children, some lessons are only learned with loss, disappointment and tears. Don't be afraid of that unpleasant territory - it's all part of the family construction zone.
We may not be "molding young minds" here, but we are helping real live people build themselves.
See the difference?