"I also instruct parents trying to document the effects of alienating behavior to look for behavior problems in the child, including discipline problems at school and/or arrest records. The alienating parents I have been acquainted with tend to be so enmeshed with their children that they cannot discipline them properly, and they will help the child make excuses for failures instead of encouraging the child to succeed. These parents will sometimes be involved in disputes with the teachers or school administrators over discipline, taking the side of the child and refusing to allow anyone else to try and correct the child’s behavior.
[p]This stuff never ends. I remember when my son was in third grade, and a teacher called home to complain about the boy's behavior. Mr. Wonderful took the call(which rarely happened, thank God), and bitched out the teacher. Everyone picks on the kid and blames him for everything. I wanted to crawl under the rug, I was so embarrased. It was and is the boy's fault 99.9 percent of the time.
[p]My ex went to one IEP meeting back in '99, because I was out of town taking care of my mom. That caused the boy to be mainstreamed into regular classes in his first yr of junior high. I finally got it straightened out, after he almost got expelled from the entire school district for issuing terrrorist threats(that was complete overreaction that time), and had him put in an SED enviroment.
[p]I don't know whether it's the teachers, her grandma passing away(father's mother that time), or the fact that Mr. Wonderful mailed the school a letter demanding their school records, but her interest in school went down the tubes last year. Yes I am worried. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink.
[p]It's up to the boy to either knock it off, or quit school and get a damn job. Their absences are making me look bad, but like I said to the IEP team a few weeks ago, I'm not strong enough to drag him out of bed anymore. Their suggestion of dumping ice water on him isn't an option. He just needs to do hard labor until he pulls his head out and realizes that he needs to go back to school. Then there was the 2 weeks when he got pneumonia again. Last year, the HMO dr kept giving him amoxycillin until he finally looked like wax. I took him to the emergency room. He had walking pneumonia. I always take my kids to county, because the rest of them are too stingy to run chest xrays. This time I told the doctor to give him Biaxin. He gave him Zpac(sp), but it cleared it up. I called for homework. All his classes are lectures, so there is no homework. You have to take notes. So much for that.
[P]Because there is no longer a reason to stay down here in the city, my kids and I decided to move back where we used to live. It will mean not only shortening the drive from where Mr. Wonderful moved, but I can try homeschooling for the boy. My girl always loved school up there, and that school district cares more about their kids, than being number one in the state.
[p]My ex has done some pretty bizarre stuff in the past, I wouldn't put it past him to mess with them over schoolwork. The question is...why?