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General Parenting
This takes difficult child to a whole new level...
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<blockquote data-quote="Shari" data-source="post: 190119" data-attributes="member: 1848"><p>difficult child doesn't actually get to carry any weapons in the woods yet. He has his bow and bb gun, and he target shoots at the house, and someone is always "assigned" to him - someone who is not otherwise shooting, etc. But when we hunt, he doesn't carry. Not ready for that yet even before this. husband did let him shoot a possum with his bb gun once, tho, but they didn't go out hunting it.</p><p>***</p><p>I am a bit caught in your thinking...difficult child is the same way - taking things away for too long with him seems counterproductive - but I just can't see taking his bow for 2 weeks in this deal. Besides that, its not an amount of TIME before he can have it back, but an amount of respect and responsibility for his own behavior that is really dictating when/if he gets it back.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Shari, post: 190119, member: 1848"] difficult child doesn't actually get to carry any weapons in the woods yet. He has his bow and bb gun, and he target shoots at the house, and someone is always "assigned" to him - someone who is not otherwise shooting, etc. But when we hunt, he doesn't carry. Not ready for that yet even before this. husband did let him shoot a possum with his bb gun once, tho, but they didn't go out hunting it. *** I am a bit caught in your thinking...difficult child is the same way - taking things away for too long with him seems counterproductive - but I just can't see taking his bow for 2 weeks in this deal. Besides that, its not an amount of TIME before he can have it back, but an amount of respect and responsibility for his own behavior that is really dictating when/if he gets it back. [/QUOTE]
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