This is a simple and effective solution.
Simply tell them it is no problem.
Then you pull out your sticky notepad--or your planner, or a chart--and
write
"I owe you a NO!"
Date it, put a brief explanation, & their name on it.
Then when they ask if they can borrow the car, go to a friends house, have dessert--whenever your feeling in a "collection mood", pull out your sticky note & say,
"Oh, looks like I owe you a "NO". Sorry!!
Wish you could do that, but I owe you
and I always pay my debts.
You can trust my word".
Then tear up the note--They missed out on something, but you are debt free now.
This will work well with kids who have already learned to respect and listen (for the most part) to their parents. And use it for the small frustrating stuff
Nothing major!!
I Owe You a Yes!
I recieved a great idea from a friend. She turned this around to a positive experience--that always works best. She gives "I owe you a YES! notes". This is her experience:
I have tried out the "I owe you a no" over the weekend, however, I have added my own little spin to it. I have included an "I owe you a Yes" as well. This way, if I come home from school/work/rehearsal, and my kids have cleaned something (anything at this point!!) or done something especially nice, and loving for each other, then I can owe them a yes!! Right now my 12 year old son is working so hard to earn so many yes's, I can't possibly think of any reason to tell him I won't take him to see the new "Star Wars" that's in the theaters!! Yuck, I hate Star Wars, but it'll be worth taking him just to have seen him working so hard at being nice and getting jobs done right the first time!! Mari
I think this is fantastic.
The only limits I can think of is that their requests still must fit into your boundaries--time, energy, money, basic rules, etc. In other words, they still must ask, and it still must be something you think is a reasonable request. You can say no. You are the parent.
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