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Online dating tips and relationship advice from Dr. Neder...
Who Exactly
Is In Control Here?
Doc:
I am living with
and planning on marrying my girlfriend. She has an 8 year old
son who lives with us. I have 2 boys, ages 5 and 6, who live
with us every other weekend.
My problem is dealing
with her son. I love him very much, and he is, by far, the sweetest
little kid I have ever met. He is very sensitive towards others
and never mistreats anyone. My concern is he has no responsibilities,
and is very forgetful. He plays with one thing, leaves it on
the floor, and moves onto another. I come home at times from
work and this is what I find: his bike left in the street in
front of the neighbors driveway, hockey goals out in the street,
with the sticks on the sidewalk, his scooter on the grass, baseball
bats, balls and gloves thrown in the garage, all the doors left
wide open, my playstation left on with the game on pause, the
T.V. turned on, and the controllers sprawled out onto the carpet,
and then I find him playing in his room with something else,
and his T.V. turned on.
When I try to teach
him to put his toys away before he moves onto something else,
his mom makes excuses for why he did that. She says that he
is just forgetful and it is not his fault, or "He's only
8", or he had a hard day at school and I let him relax
before we start on his homework. Is this relaxing? Not for me
to come home to after a long day at work.
Do I give up on
this? Should I just learn to accept that the house is going
to be ruled by a child, and that he does not have to take accountability
for his actions and clean up after himself, or should I move
on?
Thanks for your
time.
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Hello!
My brother, you're
the only man in that house that I know of. If your house isn't
in the order you want it to be in (whether it’s because of the
kids or not), then you have to make it that way.
I suggest you sit
down first with your fiancé and simply lay down the law.
No more excuses as to why the 8-year-old doesn't respect you,
the house or his things. You are simply going to explain that
you have certain expectations and that as the man of the house;
you expect them to be met. That is the foundation of any future
relationship among any of you.
You also need to
decide firmly and specifically what the relationship between
all of you is. You are the "daddy" here and what you
say goes. Mommy is going to have to accept that is the fact
- and stand behind you. She is also going to have to understand
that as the daddy, you are one of the disciplinarians of the
household and her boy is only going to benefit from that male
influence.
Finally, you and
she both need to agree to sit down with the kid and explain
the new rules to him. Mommy is going to back you 100% and help
you handle the kid. No more excusing away the bad behavior.
You're going to start taking away toys that are not put back
when you come home. You might need to buy a shed with a lock
or rent a storage unit to put these in. A few weeks of being
toy-free will probably get the message across.
You also need to
find little rewards for him when they are put away. Be sure
to make these rewards small - but make them. One example is
to give back a toy when he's done well. I'd stop however at
buying new toys as a reward unless he's done something very
well - having put back all the toys everyday for a month for
instance.
Eventually, one
of a few things is going to happen:
1) The kid will
have no toys left to leave around - problem solved.
2) He will learn that his actions have consequences - problem
really solved.
I believe the key
to bringing up self-assured, responsible kids is one thing:
superior fire-power. You are the adult - not him. You decide
the rules - not him. You give out the punishments and the rewards
based on behavior - not him. You are in control - not him.
However, he is
in control of his actions and what happens ultimately by either
doing what he's supposed to do, or receiving the punishment
for not.
Feel free to tell
mom I said so.
Best regards...
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Have a love, relationship,
sex or man/woman question? I answer all email. You can write
to me at dwneder@beingman.com
for answers. For more information about my books, "Being
a Man in a Woman's World" (volume I & II), and other
products visit: www.beingaman.com.
Check out the discussion group at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/beingaman.
Copyright (c) 2004-2011, Dr. Dennis W. Neder
All rights reserved.
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