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She's back at it
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<blockquote data-quote="DazedandConfused" data-source="post: 476510" data-attributes="member: 831"><p>Hi Maggie,</p><p></p><p>There is absolutely NOTHING wrong with wanting a peaceful difficult child antics-free life. If that means difficult child not moving back home, then that is what it means. You have enough on your plate. </p><p></p><p>(I tend to take a hard line on this type of issue, by the way)</p><p></p><p>All the years I had to suffer with my now 20 y/o daughter's antics. I made it clear, when she turned 18 she would be OUT on her kiester if she pulled any of the nonsense while I was trying to raise her. She knew I meant it, too. I still do mean it. I grew up with a alcoholic/sociopath father, and I wasn't going to have one more day of difficult child behavior than I had to. Amazing when she turned 18, how it suddenly stopped. She still lives at home, has a part time job, fixing to go back to school. It's certainly not perfect, but the constant chaos disappeared.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DazedandConfused, post: 476510, member: 831"] Hi Maggie, There is absolutely NOTHING wrong with wanting a peaceful difficult child antics-free life. If that means difficult child not moving back home, then that is what it means. You have enough on your plate. (I tend to take a hard line on this type of issue, by the way) All the years I had to suffer with my now 20 y/o daughter's antics. I made it clear, when she turned 18 she would be OUT on her kiester if she pulled any of the nonsense while I was trying to raise her. She knew I meant it, too. I still do mean it. I grew up with a alcoholic/sociopath father, and I wasn't going to have one more day of difficult child behavior than I had to. Amazing when she turned 18, how it suddenly stopped. She still lives at home, has a part time job, fixing to go back to school. It's certainly not perfect, but the constant chaos disappeared. [/QUOTE]
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