Diamondeye wrote:
Corolinth wrote:
It seems to me that many of the responses are overly impressed with bringing down the hammer of parental authority into an uppity teenager. The sad fact of the matter is that too many parents are unprepared for the reality of having adult offspring. It's one thing to be an effective parent when your children are young and don't have a choice but to do whatever you tell them. It's another thing entirely to continue to parent effectively when your children are in their twenties and thirties. The latter requires a level of respect that has to be earned, and involves understanding that you now have zero authority in your child's life.
True, but not entirely. You have authority in proportion to the support you provide and the willingness of the child to accept it over the alternative. What you have to understand is that you don't have
ultimate authority; you have the authority you negotiate for. If the kid wants you to not have that authority, they have to be willing to not accept the benefits. If you want the authority, you have to provide the benefits in proportion to the control you exercise.
Meh. The problem with ultimatums is people call them.
You have to look at all possible likely outcomes of a particular course of action and ensure that they are acceptable to you when you make an ultimatum.
For instance, parents make rules like that because, ultimately, they care. Whether they are right or wrong, they usually want what's best for their child. Do we agree on that? I mean, exceptions exist, but I truly believe that most parents have a strong priority to do what's best for their children.
So, you want the best education for the best quality of life for your child. If you have certain religious or moral views, you feel its in your children's best interests to follow them, so you try to instill them and keep your kids on the straight and narrow. You might see a particular behavior as risky and try to discourage it. All that is fine...but the problem with ultimatums, is sometimes, they get called.
If your adult child would rather not get an education than follow your idea of what's best for them, would you prefer that they have a shitty life? Or do you want to make it as good as you can? Do you still wish them the best? Or do you stubbornly hope for the opportunity to say "I told you so?"
Basically, if you knew your child was going to continue a course of action you disapproved of, whether or not you continued to try to help them in their life, do you really want to pull their support out from under them to go from "possibly/probably a bad life decision" to "absolutely a bad life decision?"
The thing is we're talking about people we love, people we'd die to protect and help. Ultimately, you don't want them to fail, even if you don't approve of their actions. My issue with ultimatums is if they are called, you either have to back down (which doesn't help when you make future demands), or stick to your guns, which may be more harmful to your child's future than the behavior you are trying to limit. If you love them, the latter is completely unacceptable.
Also, anyone expecting an 18 year old to act like an adult has forgotten what its like to be an 18 year old in love. "I'm thinking she's too self centered. It's all about 'her,'" yeah. Didn't we just say she's 18?