We have a problem. Ds9 lies AllTheTime. He doesn't seem to show remorse or anything. He's been punished, lectured, and he just does not get it. He never admits his lie either which I find infuriating.
A google search shows lying is really common, and age appropriate. Some even call it a developmental milestone. I just can not stand it!!!
Any suggestions?
I can't really drop the hammer like my parents did. I won't do that. They overreacted to small lies and made me feel like the most worthless person. I ended up learning how to lie to not get caught--- I still felt guilt but my primary goal was to not get caught.
Ds has self esteem problems already, and I don't want to make him feel like a bad person for lying. Do not get me wrong--- he knows we don't approve of the lies and we do not accept that. I have explained the trust issue many times--- and how every time he lies I trust him less and less. But I don't want him to feel like he's evil incarnate either.
I guess I'm just wondering how any of you have dealt with this?
This is the last lie:: we have a fishbowl we fill with ping pong balls for good behavior. When it's filled we all go on an outing. It was almost filled--- and then ds added about 15 balls to it so that they are falling out. Subtle right? He blamed his sister who is 3'6" tall--- she can't reach up there where the ping pong balls are even standing on a chair like ds does. So... Suggestions? In his mind he's helping the family along by filling the bowl. In my mind he's breaking the "kids don't touch" rule. And the worst thing is the cover up lie. Any punishment with the Ping pong balls will punish all the kids...
This is just one lue. He lies about brushing teeth, reading, going on the computer, eating candy, eating cookies, washing his hands, hitting his sister, playing video games... You name it, he lies about it. I'll definitely have his counselor work with him on this later, but I need ideas about the damned ping pong thing. Ugh.
A google search shows lying is really common, and age appropriate. Some even call it a developmental milestone. I just can not stand it!!!
Any suggestions?
I can't really drop the hammer like my parents did. I won't do that. They overreacted to small lies and made me feel like the most worthless person. I ended up learning how to lie to not get caught--- I still felt guilt but my primary goal was to not get caught.
Ds has self esteem problems already, and I don't want to make him feel like a bad person for lying. Do not get me wrong--- he knows we don't approve of the lies and we do not accept that. I have explained the trust issue many times--- and how every time he lies I trust him less and less. But I don't want him to feel like he's evil incarnate either.
I guess I'm just wondering how any of you have dealt with this?
This is the last lie:: we have a fishbowl we fill with ping pong balls for good behavior. When it's filled we all go on an outing. It was almost filled--- and then ds added about 15 balls to it so that they are falling out. Subtle right? He blamed his sister who is 3'6" tall--- she can't reach up there where the ping pong balls are even standing on a chair like ds does. So... Suggestions? In his mind he's helping the family along by filling the bowl. In my mind he's breaking the "kids don't touch" rule. And the worst thing is the cover up lie. Any punishment with the Ping pong balls will punish all the kids...
This is just one lue. He lies about brushing teeth, reading, going on the computer, eating candy, eating cookies, washing his hands, hitting his sister, playing video games... You name it, he lies about it. I'll definitely have his counselor work with him on this later, but I need ideas about the damned ping pong thing. Ugh.
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