Lilacs4Me
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2015
- Messages
- 2,534
See here's the thing...that doesn't necessarily mean he'll stop, and it very may encourage him to rebel.
I was a very bad teenager, I'll just leave it at that. The more my parents tried to "punish" me with stuff like that, the more I either rebelled or completely ignored them. Grounding didn't work, I didn't listen to it. At the end of the day, I had to make my own decisions and come to my own realizations that what I was doing was wrong and had to change my ways.
I am not in any way, shape or form suggesting that OP do nothing at all, or encourage DS to smoke. However, the "iron fist" thing may or may not work....
...At the end of the day, the reality is that if he wants to do it, he's going to...no matter what you say or do. I know that's hard to hear, but it's a fact. Again, I'm not saying tolerate it. Not in the least. Be firm with him, explain it's not only unhealthy but at his age, it's illegal. I'd even be fine with doing some punishments, such as Xbox. At the same time, I'd remember that at the end of the day, only he can choose to make the right decision or not. I'd even explain that to him...tell him you realize he makes his own choices when you're not around. Encourage him to make the right ones and by crystal clear what life/health ramifications there can be for making the wrong ones. We can't be there with our kids 24/7, and nor should we be. They have to learn to make their own decisions, and learn what can happen with those decisions.
I agree with this^
I think that parents need to stick with the route of reasonable discipline that the child is used to, (barring little or no discipline of course), because that is what the child will respond to. I am not suggesting NEVER trying something new, I'm just saying that I think it works best when you up the stakes in a way that corresponds to what you are already doing. For example, if you have always used "time outs" or groundings, and it works, up the ante on the grounding. Make it hurt more. But I wouldn't do a 360 at this point and start using crazy punishments that don't make sense. JMO
Two concepts I thought I would NEVER say about disciplining children before I knew better, not in response to Klayfish's post, just in general:
First, I have a nearly-18 year old that was the type where the more we punished, the more he dug in. When I stopped the "punishment" and calmly talked to him and got to the point of reason, he would concede. Sometimes it seemed like it would take FOREVER for that happen, and often I said that I don't care and tried the punishment route...he will do what I say when I say it! But alas, it never was to be. Punishment just didn't mean anything to him. Reasoning and logic worked. Punishment works wonders with DD14, though....I take her phone away, she pouts for an hour, and she is sweet as pie (and conciliatory, and willing to do ANYTHING I ask of her!) in order to get it back.
2nd, the ADHD plays a part in how the child will respond to discipline. I am only in year one dealing with a child with ADHD now that we have custody of our great-nephew, but it is NOT like what I thought it would be! I can explain things, and lay out my expectations, and warn about punishments all day long, and a few hours later, he will have zero recollection of even having the conversation, much less what I said. He is only just turning 12 this month, (maturity level of an 8-ish year old), so we aren't in the drug/alcohol stage yet, but I do fear for that because he is extremely impulsive and very easily coerced into doing what someone wants him to do. I think the best thing for a kid like this would to take away as much of the temptation and access to this stuff as possible and monitor closely, which seems to work well so far with my nephew in other areas. He just doesn't have the ability to reason things through, and I don't see him developing this skill by the time he is 15. And he has a serious drive to make people want to like him, so he will do anything anyone suggests. Peer pressure will be non-existent with this child because he will put up zero fight and instead become a willing participant in whatever the kids tell him to do. Since punishment, logic, and reasoning don't seem to work, taking away as much as you can from the source, and monitoring all the time, will probably be the best route. A regular kid without ADHD might put up a fight or think they are being treated like a baby, but with at least MY ADHD kid, that is the only thing that has worked so far.
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