She had them at “no allowance next week” all right. (I thought Michael was just making funny faces at himself and Elizabeth accused him of the faces were made for her.)
My three-year-old granddaughter and her friends have learned the word “consequences.” When you do something bad…there are consequences. Recently, after a nice evening of playtime and stories, Laura decided she wasn’t going to go to sleep. She whined and cried and tried to wake her baby brother, with whom she shares a room. Her mother, Katie, said she would have to give up her favourite sleep toys if she didn’t end the strike. Laura whined and lost her teddy. She then lost her blankie, her pillow, her quilt and her sheets. The whining continued until she was lying on a stripped bed with nothing but her “pull-ups” to keep her warm. At this point she capitulated, stopped her bad behaviour, and decided to sleep.
Katie was pleased to have had the standoff resolved — thanks to “consequences.”
Yes, they do. I apply the same system with my students. And if they argue, I’m happy to tell them that my classroom is NOT a democracy.
Side note for teachers: I also recently discovered the Hogwarts-house idea. They all play in groups for a prize and if someone messed up, the whole group gets points taken off. At age 11, that works quite nicely. I haven’t had to write a discipline slip in weeks :-)
I ran into a Cuban military officer in a bar in Mexico. He was convinced of the superiority of socialism, like just about everyone on the payroll of the Cuban government. We got to talking, and he said all the problems in Cuba were the fault of US sanctions. I replied that there are good reasons to lift the embargo, and he said “Indeed, we want Americans to visit Cuba”. I asked if Americans do go to Cuba and interact with Cubans, wouldn’t that mean the Cubans would be exposed to capitalism? He could not come up with a remark to that.
This has never ever helped on my older daughter. I could easily increase the withdrawal of allowance until she became 20 years and she would still not stop fighting.
The younger one it worked on, but she would be pissed of on me for at least two weeks.
Templo S.U.D. over 9 years ago
She had them at “no allowance next week” all right. (I thought Michael was just making funny faces at himself and Elizabeth accused him of the faces were made for her.)
alviebird over 9 years ago
Boy, is this strip timely. Too bad the current administration didn’t have a little more faith in them.
alangwatkins over 9 years ago
Right On!!
sbwertz over 9 years ago
No, they are not reprints. She is retelling the story from the old strips, but the strips are new…especially the Sunday ones.
JanLC over 9 years ago
Lynn’s Notes:
My three-year-old granddaughter and her friends have learned the word “consequences.” When you do something bad…there are consequences. Recently, after a nice evening of playtime and stories, Laura decided she wasn’t going to go to sleep. She whined and cried and tried to wake her baby brother, with whom she shares a room. Her mother, Katie, said she would have to give up her favourite sleep toys if she didn’t end the strike. Laura whined and lost her teddy. She then lost her blankie, her pillow, her quilt and her sheets. The whining continued until she was lying on a stripped bed with nothing but her “pull-ups” to keep her warm. At this point she capitulated, stopped her bad behaviour, and decided to sleep.
Katie was pleased to have had the standoff resolved — thanks to “consequences.”
Adele Derwald over 9 years ago
Yes, they do. I apply the same system with my students. And if they argue, I’m happy to tell them that my classroom is NOT a democracy.
Side note for teachers: I also recently discovered the Hogwarts-house idea. They all play in groups for a prize and if someone messed up, the whole group gets points taken off. At age 11, that works quite nicely. I haven’t had to write a discipline slip in weeks :-)
USN1977 over 9 years ago
I ran into a Cuban military officer in a bar in Mexico. He was convinced of the superiority of socialism, like just about everyone on the payroll of the Cuban government. We got to talking, and he said all the problems in Cuba were the fault of US sanctions. I replied that there are good reasons to lift the embargo, and he said “Indeed, we want Americans to visit Cuba”. I asked if Americans do go to Cuba and interact with Cubans, wouldn’t that mean the Cubans would be exposed to capitalism? He could not come up with a remark to that.
David Rickard Premium Member over 9 years ago
Too bad foreign nations/leaders aren’t preteen children….
SundayBuzz over 9 years ago
Of course sanctions work! Look how quickly the Cubans capitulated!
Catherine Spencer-Mills Premium Member over 9 years ago
Actually this technique worked great with my kids. Only had to do it once.
loner34 over 9 years ago
This strip isn’t being political
That is true, but it does apply to current situations.
hippogriff over 9 years ago
agrestic: I saw that footage. They were chanting, “Death to no one, Long live life”, in English and Farsi both.
Nicole ♫ ⊱✿ ◕‿◕✿⊰♫ Premium Member over 9 years ago
Wow…that’s a bit of a punishment overkill.
HeidiTentee over 9 years ago
Don’t tell Iran or Cuba.
ingibjornsson about 9 years ago
This has never ever helped on my older daughter. I could easily increase the withdrawal of allowance until she became 20 years and she would still not stop fighting.
The younger one it worked on, but she would be pissed of on me for at least two weeks.
tea62 about 9 years ago
Sanctions work. Naw, Obama knows best!