Quote:
Originally Posted by Nephythys
* His door stays open and or unlocked when she comes over and the family (any of us) are in the house. His privacy is subject to being invaded at any time- and should it be otherwise or he violates his word that it won't happen again then he can count on people barging in.
*Should this continue in a manner that disrupts the household then she either can not come over (which I do not want to do) or I take other action- like removing his door completely, or talking to her parents.
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This is a great start. I would further define the beedroom door policy. "Open" only if I we you. I think not going completely bullistic, going to her parents and all helps gain his trust. If you trust him, give him the shot with these rules. Write them down, and have him sign it as well. This solidifies the rules. The thing is, you can't be there 24/7 and teens will do what they want when no one is around to watch them. If they know the rules, they can't argue with the punishment when they get caught, and they now where the boundries are.
Then just go on with your life......
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nephythys
Ok- here is my "plan"- thus far....
First a conversation with him to discuss:
-Risks
*pregnancy
*STD's
*Risks to her
-If he cares about her, as he says he does, he would not put her health and future at
risk by continuing with this behavior.
-Rules in the house
*Open/unlocked door policy- subject to surprise visits at any time
*Violations will lead to more restrictions
*There will be NO sex in my house
-If he wants to continue this he can move out at 18 and get on with his adult life
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I'm sure she was suppose to be somewhere else with someone else.
These rules are great. But I think I would go one step further. I didn't know for years that my son was doing drugs/alcohol/ciggarets. It might be a good idea (if you do write them down) to add all rules like the drugs, alcohol, and curfue if any, chores, school work, general behavior, etc.
Tell him you love him, but you were dissapointed in his behavior. He knows it was wrong because it said he'd never do it again. My guess is that is was not the first time, and it won't be the last. At least if you let him know the rules, you've done your job and anything that happends is his fault.