Recently I wrote about raising my 9 year old son Max and the fact that there were no consistent rules in our house. My wife and I had been at our wits end trying to figure out how we were going to raise this kid right.
We read a lot of books and listened to parents, educators, and counselors. We tried implementing all of the suggestions but nothing seemed to work.
Recently we started working with both a family and a parent counselor. The first comes a couple of times a month, generally on Saturdays, so that Max will be involved in the session. The second comes every week in the morning to work with just my wife and me.
Several weeks ago they both asked us the same questions independently:
What are our house rules?
So we rattled off several things: no hitting, no swearing, and no yelling, among other things.
What are the consequences if the rules are broken?
We gave some answers like “he gets a time out if he does A” but then sometimes “we take a toy away” and “we have been known to take away a privilege or a special outing.”
Where are the rules and consequences posted?
Umm, nowhere.
Does Max know the rules and consequences?
He knows the rules; we tell him all the time. And, well, he has experienced the consequences so he knows something will happen if he does anything wrong.
Both counselors shook their heads. They suggested it might be best if we had a joint session with both counselors to come up with some rules. We agreed.
Hooray, finally we are going to find out what we can do about House Rules!
We all joined together last week and hammered out a list of rules. These are some of them:
- No swearing
- No hitting or kicking
- No yelling, whining, or screaming
- No disobeying parents
- Ask politely for things
You get the idea. We have several more but these will do for examples.
We didn’t come up with consequences on that day but one thing was suggested. We had recently started giving Max an allowance. With it he could follow his passion with buying as many things as he could or put it in the bank. But that’s another story. In this case the idea was brought up that for some of the consequences he could lose some of his money. That was something to think about because our consequences weren’t working.
We scheduled a second group meeting for this passed Monday. This time it was going to be after school so Max could contribute to the discussion.
When the day came both counselors arrived and sat down in the living room. Max was dropped off from school, came in the house, and asked the usual question: “Who’s coming today.”
When we told him he was disappointed. We were surprised because he likes both people and generally has fun with them. On this day, we think that with both parents and both counselors present he may have felt intimidated. He adamantly refused to join in the meeting.
“But Max, this is about setting house rules. Last week you were excited when we told you this was happening.”
“Yeah, well, not today.”
We told him that we were going to do it anyway with or without his contributions. He shrugged and told us that we had better make tougher rules for the parents otherwise he won’t follow any of his.
So we got down to business. We pulled out a large cardboard sheet and in one column wrote out our list of rules. While we were doing this we could hear Max muttering and swearing in the other room; he wanted one of us to play. He even went so far as to disrupt the discussions several times.
The counselors just shrugged and smiled. Their response was that he didn’t like what we were doing and didn’t want it to happen. We persevered. Once we were done listing the rules we started on the consequences for each:
- Loses five cents for each swear.
- Five minute time out and a loss of privileges for hitting and kicking.
- For yelling, whining, or screaming Max will first get a warning. Then he will lose five cents each time he does it.
- The first time he disobeys he will get a warning. After that he will lose twenty-five cent for each incident.
- If he doesn’t ask politely he won’t get what he asked for.
When we were done we called Max in to see our results. He started to read the board and then complained it was all about him and there was nothing about the parents. We reassured him that we would have to follow the same rules.
But he wasn’t happy and he tried to tear the sheet down the middle. We stopped him and taped it up on the living room wall so that we would all be able to see it.
At the same time we attached a weekly sheet of pictures of one hundred nickels. For each transgression nickels would be crossed off. Whatever was left at the end of the week would be what he gets for allowance.
Max asked a very smart question: “What if I do so many bad things that I go over the amount of money I get?”
We told him that it would then carry over into the following week.
The counselors think that it will only take a week before Max starts following the rules. That would be nice and we will be waiting with bated breath.
Twenty four hours later we have only heard two swears coming out of his mouth. Amazing! There has been very little screaming or whining. Awesome!
So far we have only crossed out a half a dozen nickels but we have noticed that he has been punishing himself too. He personally has scratched out another forty. He says it is because he deserved it. Seems like he doesn’t think our consequences were powerful enough.
Another interesting reaction was that when he realized each swear was worth five cents but disobeying would cost him twenty-five cents. His eyes widened; his mouth opened in a circle; and he clapped his hand over it.
Do I think this is it? Is he now going to follow all the rules?
I find it hard to believe that it would happen this quickly. I think that he will probably start testing us to see what he can get away with. It may get worse before it gets better. As long as my wife and I keep a united front it should eventually work.
As the counselors were leaving after the meeting my wife said “If we had realized it was so easy to set up these rules we would have done this a long time ago.”
But they told us that most parents know how to do it but they don’t realize it; they, and we, need to be shown the first time.
This takes care of four of Max’s five problems mentioned in the last post. I’ll talk about the fifth one, modeling behaviors for him, in my next one.




3 comments for this post
Looking forward to tonight’s show, but sorry that it will be the last for the season. I hate being House-less for the summer.
A softer, kinder version of John Irvin’s book, which was edgier and more critical, though you can’t blame the filmmakers since Irving himself adapted his novel.
We have had new carpet in our house and a no shoe rule applies, but my close friend hates taking his shoes off, he says he hates being in his socks only, and feels it makes him vunerably! Can anybody understand what hes saying as it sounds stupid to me.
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