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#1
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I'm not happy!
Last conversation w/ T throws a huge wrench into our living situation. Originally I had my 2 DD share a bedroom. Then my DS has his own bedroom. My hubby & I share a bedroom. We're all packed into a pretty small house. Very little privacy. We've had a lot of issues w/ our oldest who is now 11yo & to help we moved her, temporarily into DS room & moved DS who is 6yo into Other DD room who is 8yo. Confusing I know. But this is only temporary. All their stuff is still in their original rooms. So now the T says that oldest DD needs stability & her privacy & we need to make the room switch. That's a lot of work! And a lot of crap to move. Problem is what do I do w/ DS who will need his privacy soon too from his sister that also shares the room! We don't have a lot of room in this house! I don't know what to do....besides move! Not possible anyway. I'm kind of angry at this T Bec to her it's an easy solution but it doesn't fix anything! What should I do?
__________________
"Doubt is like dye. Once it spreads into the fabric of excuses you've woven, you'll never get rid of the stain." Jodi Picoult |
![]() Wild Coyote
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![]() paingrl
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#2
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heres how my wife and I are working the problem out with our three children (two girls and a boy one boy and one girl are twins,) they are still very young but we are trying to work in each having their own space actual bedroom space in this fixer upper we are in is limited. we placed the two girls in the largest bedroom, the boy in the smallest and my wife and I in the middle sized room. then we took the girls dressers and placed them in the center of the room each facing the direction of each girls side of the room we also added two book cases back to back so that each girl had a book case facing their side of the room. now each girl has their own room with a futon style bed that can be placed up like a sofa or down like a single sized twin bed. this way when the girls are old enough for sleep overs and company they have seating playing room as well as room for an air mattress for their company. when the girls are older we plan on adding dresser top mirrors. for extra lighting each girl has a touch lite firmly secured on the wall above the head of their beds. it took some work and some compromise to do this as my wife and I had to give up our master bedroom but in the long run we feel thats whats best for the children. at some point in the future we plan on putting in actual walls to separate the two girls |
#3
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can you divide the rooms with a curtain for the 2 younger kids so your son can have privacy?
she probably said that because she is the closest to being a teenager. i always thought it was the oldest child who would get the private room, for that reason. |
#4
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She'll have to learn to live with it. Part of growing up is learning you can't have everything you want. I think the boy needs his own room on account of gender differences.
__________________
Nammu …Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself. You are a child of the universe no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. …... Desiderata Max Ehrmann |
#5
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maybe i don't know what i am talking about but 6 and 8 are still close enough in age that i don't see how it matters as much now--but maybe i am wrong--either way you can divide the rooms and teach the other child to respect privacy-no going on the other side without permission unless its to leave the room, that sort of thing.
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#6
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most parenting classes and department of human services, treatment providers in the USA say\teach the usual age of separating gendered children into their own rooms and having a boys room and a girls room, teach knocking before entering, good touch bad touch, each persons body is their own for only their self ...that kind of stuff in preschool , 5 years old at the latest, simply so as to avoid future problems that can occur with 6-10 year olds boys and girls entering pre puberty stages. |
#7
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maybe you should bring that^^ up with the therapist. |
![]() amandalouise
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#8
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I agree. Unless the therapist plans to find and pay for a larger home, then the kids will have to deal with it. Siblings sometimes just have to share a room. No, they may not like it, but it is what it is. They have to learn to deal with it. End of discussion with therapist, and therapist can work with daughter in figuring how to accept that it is what it is.
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#9
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Thank you for the comments it really helps.
More details. We moved the oldest DD to her own room Bec of being highly sexualized & asking her sib to "help". She's also doing a lot of masturbating. So we thought the separation from her sib was important. My DS who's 6 loves being in the room w/his Sis who's 8. They get along well & I think he was lonely in his room. One big problem is the way the girls bedroom is set up. We custom made these beds for them. The ceiling is lofted & one bed is suspended from the ceiling so it's like a bunk bed or nest. So it's 6' off the floor. The room is small. The other bed is basically built on top of a 6 drawer bureau system. The bed is 4' off the floor & on rollers. So the beds make an "L" shape. Really hard to move. We had this done when they were little hoping to add space. It worked but they still seem on top of ea other. I like the idea of splitting the room somehow...its just coming up with something that works. I just hated that this was the answer the therapist gave...well, move the kids. I had 6 sibs growing up & none of us had our own room! We keep rearranging things for our oldest & she doesn't seem to be moving along in her issues. I'd very much like to give my kids their own space. We r packed in here like sardines in the first place & "space boundaries" apparently are an issue. Maybe that's for another post. Ugh.
__________________
"Doubt is like dye. Once it spreads into the fabric of excuses you've woven, you'll never get rid of the stain." Jodi Picoult |
![]() Nammu
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![]() amandalouise
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#10
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Oh, with that detail then, yes, she needs to be separated from her siblings and supervised very closely around them. That's a serious situation and absolutely necessary for safety.
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#11
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It does sound very complicated. I don't see how it can work in the long run? I would either look at saving to add on and convert a garage, attic, basement, or porch space to a bedroom or at buying a different house and/or figure out another way to get the children enough privacy but not so they are living in their bedrooms; bedrooms are for sleeping.
I would make them their own storage or sitting/study areas and see if I could spend more time with each, alone. If I had a walk-in closet or something I'd convert that to the oldest girl's space, only she would be allowed in there with her clothes/stuff/perhaps desk to do homework, etc. and try to neutralize shared bedrooms so no one cared a lot since they would just be for sleeping, have a bed and dresser perhaps.
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"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
#12
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Tricky situation ((((HUGS PATAGONIA)))
I agree w/ mostly everything already said...check out some parenting websites and pint rest for ideas for some creative solutions ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
__________________
"The woods are lovely, dark, and deep But I have promises to keep And miles to go before I sleep And miles to go before I sleep" |
#13
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Wow, culture clash. I shared with my "opposite" sex sibling until we were 8 and 6. People would have laughed at the idea that we couldn't share a room.
Everyone in my country that I know of that had three kids and only two rooms have always let the older kid have a room of their own and they younger kids have shared. No matter of gender. That that would be child neglect is just beyond me. When my friends little brother and sister wanted separate rooms (no they did not pair up the 14 year old girl and the 9 year old girl leaving the 7 year old boy alone, they let the kids close in age share), the parents decided to give up their bedroom. I would have gone nuts sharing rooms after age 10 especially if a 6 year old sibling got their own room. |
#14
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Crap! No easy answers here! Just not sure what to do.
Thanks for all the advice. We'll figure something out hopefully
__________________
"Doubt is like dye. Once it spreads into the fabric of excuses you've woven, you'll never get rid of the stain." Jodi Picoult |
#15
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#16
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We might be moving our "bedroom" into the basement when we need to give up our room. Our basement right now is the "family room" Bec the tv is there.
Husband won't sell house. Have to make it work somehow
__________________
"Doubt is like dye. Once it spreads into the fabric of excuses you've woven, you'll never get rid of the stain." Jodi Picoult |
![]() amandalouise
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#17
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The girls should be together the boy should be seperate.
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dxd: C-PTSD, major depression, OCD and anxiety psychotherapy, EMDR & Cymbalta 60mg |
#18
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![]() Wild Coyote
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#19
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Quote:
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![]() scorpiosis37
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#20
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No, not if the younger daughter is in potential danger.
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![]() scorpiosis37
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#21
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I'm working on getting my 2.5 year old moved into her 13.5 year old sister's room. We have no choice because I'm not going to put the 2.5 year old in with my 11 year old son.
It sounds like you are stuck in a very hard position. I hope you can work something out |
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