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AIBU?

To NOT take DS's trainers to school after because he forgot them again

64 replies

memoo · 12/11/2010 10:30

Ok, DS is nearly 10 and in year 5.

Since september I have had to go to school at least 20 times to take things to him that he has forgot. This morning I told him several times to put his trainers in his bag for school, each time he replied "ok".

I've just found his trainers lying on the floor in the hall! Angry

Aibu to not take them today as a way of teaching him to take a little more responsibility for himself?

He doesn't have PE tday, he just wears his trainers at lunch time as they play football and have to change into their trainers first.

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ChippingIn · 12/11/2010 12:00

Put your pyjamas back on and get yourself down to his classroom!

That'll fix his memory! Grin

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Hullygully · 12/11/2010 12:01

Damsel, yes, I think it will be best if they live with me. The girl can cook for the whole family and do the washing and stuff, when she isn't at her high powered job, and I can look after my lovely boy frenziedly.

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DamselInDisgrace · 12/11/2010 12:06

Great plan, Hully. It'll be a happy home for you all.

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Niecie · 12/11/2010 12:10

YANBU for not taking the trainers today.

YABU for doing 20 times this term!!

My DS1 has dyspraxia and is cronically disorganised and forgetful but the only time I would take things into school is if he forgot his lunch (not often as he is a boy after my own heart and likes his foodBlush) or if he forgot his clarinet for his lesson because I don't want him wasting the music teacher's time.

If I have repeatedly told him to pack things and he hasn't done it then that is up to him. He will have to live with the consequences. He is in Yr 6. Life will not be getting easier if he doesn't start developing his own strategies and stop relying on me when he starts secondary next year.

DS's OT suggested putting a laminated list by the door for him to check on his way out. Perhaps your DS could have something similar then the only thing he has to remember is to check the list!!

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DamselInDisgrace · 12/11/2010 12:13

DS1 is dyspraxic too. Laminated lists don't work either, he forgets to look at them. I get to be nagging mum all the time, and he often tells me off for reminding him AND then forgets to do it anyway. Argh.

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jeee · 12/11/2010 12:14

My year 5 dd forgot her swimming stuff two weeks on the trot. I told her that if she forgot it again, I'd bring it in in her little sister's disney princess bag. She hasn't forgotten it again.

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ChippingIn · 12/11/2010 12:48

Jeee - she's 5 and would be embarrassed by a Disney Princess bag?

I find that really sad :(

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jeee · 12/11/2010 12:55

ChippingIn - no she's year 5, ie. 10 years old.

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ChippingIn · 12/11/2010 12:58

LOL Missed that bit - that makes me feel a bit better. Kids are growing up so fast, 10 is young enough to be embarrassed by a Disney Bag... 5 was just Shock Grin

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memoo · 12/11/2010 13:19

DS would definately be mortified if I took his stuff in a Disney bag!!! Don't think he'd mind me wearing my PJ's though

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ChippingIn · 12/11/2010 18:27

Well, there you go then! I'm sure if you don't have one, someone on here will have a spare one they'd be happy to send you!!

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emptyshell · 12/11/2010 18:50

You take them in - he forgets them again tomorrow.

You don't take them in - he can't play football today, and tomorrow morning he thinks "oh I want to play football today, I need to take my trainers."

Or you take them in at lunchtime, wear your most embarrassing clothes, get the cooperation of the office staff to hand them to him in person and do your most mummy "snookybunnkins give me a kiss goodbye" routine ever so he's so horrified he never forgets anything again in case you stage a repeat performance.

Option 1's probably quicker than option 3.

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HecateQueenOfWitches · 12/11/2010 19:29

The thing about them constantly forgetting is that, imo, there is a certain "I don't have to bother trying to remember things" about it.

The (unconscious maybe) attitude that they don't have to be responsible, mum will sort it out.

Same as the men who never remember their mum's birthday and other things. Their partner takes care of it. They forget. Because they know that they don't have to bother to remember.

If you are always bailed out, you learn that you don't need to bother. You may not say that, you may not realise you think that, but at the back of your mind is the knowledge that some muggins will sort it all out for you.

Well, far better to know that there is no muggins. It's you or nothing. Amazing how much memory improves. And how quickly...

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HecateQueenOfWitches · 12/11/2010 19:30

but option 3 is much more fun, emptyshell Grin

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