Since you have a husband to co-parent with you, it would be a waste of precious resources to not use his parental instincts in addition to yours, though his instincts will be different from yours. Why not start by assuming that his intentions are equally in favor of your son's best interests as yours are. Men have wisdom too; especially when it comes to raising males.
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Is this common? It's like he can't accept my son's limitations.
Accepting that your son's limitations may not be at the base of your husband's frustrations right now. Your husband knows that unless your son starts to understand the outcome of violent outbursts (no matter the reason for the outbursts) your son will suffer severe consequences down the line. Consequences imposed by entities such as the police and legal system of which the two of you have no control. Perhaps your husband feels that your son needs to start understanding sooner than later; understanding being a learning curve that takes time.
Yes, addressing accountability is essential. If not started now within the loving community of family and councilors; it will be started later by the emotion-neutral law enforcement community.
Consequences are not punishment or shaming, they are the fare that is intrinsic to any destructive act. Consequences, though costly, are also intrinsically instructive. Please do not squander this precious resource by making sure that anyone
except your son pays the full fare for his destructive acts.
Yes, fixing holes in drywall is good do-it-yourself choice. Compound needs to be spread in thin layers with a day to dry between each layer.
Last edited by MountainLaurel on 24 May 2013, 9:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.