Welcome to the Internet's most trusted self-help & psychology portal, developed by hundreds of volunteers as a labor of love. Since 1994, our licensed professionals bring you the science of psychology, complete with a worldwide support community. C'mon in - and help yourself!

Does Your Child Say This? "I forgot"-- Teaching Responsibilty

* Hover over the stars and rate this article:
 

by James Lehman, MSW

Is your child’s answer to everything, “I forgot?” The fact of the matter is, sometimes children do forget, and certainly a reminder from the parent to do their work or complete a task is appropriate. But when kids use “I forgot” on a regular basis, it becomes a way to justify irresponsible behavior.

As an excuse, “I forgot” means the child is avoiding a certain task or responsibility which they don’t feel they can perform and don’t know how to get help with. Or it could be because they’re being lazy and don’t care about it. Laziness causes as much irresponsible behavior on the part of children as any other explanation.

Sometimes laziness can be interpreted as “I’m tired and I don’t feel like it.” Sometimes laziness can be interpreted as “My life’s not going to get better anyway, why should I try?” In either case, laziness doesn’t empower the child to take care of business.
So when your child says “I forgot,” you have to say, “Forgetting is not an excuse to justify not doing something.”

Child:“I forgot!”

Translation:“I don’t feel like it.” Or ”Why should I try?”

Ineffective response:You didn’t forget! You’re just saying that because you’re lazy.”

Effective response:“Not forgetting is your responsibility. I’ll help you learn ways to not forget, such as creating an assignment book for school, or using cue cards to prompt you for the next task. If you’d like, I’ll help you develop a list. But you are responsible for remembering what it is you need to do.”

About the author:

James Lehman is a behavioral therapist and the creator of The Total Transformation Program for parents.He has worked with troubled children and teens for three decades. James holds a Masters Degree in Social Work from Boston University.

Does Your Child Say This? "I forgot." reprinted with permission from Empowering Parents.

Originally published 5/20/09
 

Post Your Comment

Email addresses are not shown publicly. Your privacy is sacred to us.