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Why This Mom Went on Strike

My boys were keeping score over everything and it drove me crazy. I was officially on strike. This meant I would be doing nothing. If they wanted food, they would have to prepare it, if they needed clean clothes, they would have to wash them. If they needed something at the store, they would have to walk to the store to get it. They would put themselves to bed. There would be no fun outings until the strike was over.
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I have two amazing boys. They are bright, funny, caring, unique, creative...and so many other positive adjectives that I could bore you to death for hours with descriptions.

They are also the ultimate score keepers.

"Why do I have to do it? I did it last time."

"How come you bought something for him and not me?"

"You went to more of his practices than mine."

"Why does he get a new backpack?"

On Friday, as a treat, I brought lunch to them in the family room so they could eat and play. When they finished, I asked them to bring the plates downstairs. That's when my older son turned to his brother and said:

"You do it."

"No, I did it last time, you do it."

"No, YOU do it, it's your turn."

And so on, until I finally told ONE OF THEM TO DO IT.

Later on that evening, my oldest wanted to knit in the tree across from our park. He couldn't hold the knitting needles and yarn while he climbed so he left them on the ground and asked his little brother to please hand them to him. They were handed up eventually, after three or four requests, begrudgingly and with a very bad attitude.

Click here to read why parenting is not for the faint of heart.

I looked on in disbelief. When did this happen? When did these two boys become the tit-for-tat brothers? When I asked my little one why handing over the knitting had turned into a fight, I was rewarded with foot stomping, whining and, "He never does anything for me."

I was done.

"Maybe you need to see how much I do for you on a daily basis. Maybe if I stop doing everything I do for the two of you, you'll understand what your dad and I do for you without complaint or attitude."

And then I finished with, "You know what? I'm going on strike as a mom."

I had no idea what this would entail but damn it, I said it so I was going to do it.

The next morning I gave them the guidelines. I was officially on strike. This meant I would be doing nothing. If they wanted food, they would have to prepare it, if they needed clean clothes, they would have to wash them. If they needed something at the store, they would have to walk to the store to get it. They would put themselves to bed. There would be no fun outings until the strike was over.

Anything of theirs I found lying around the house would have to be earned back through chores. None of this affected how I felt about them. I still loved them to the depths of my soul and would be there for them when they needed me.

How long the strike lasted would be up to them. They had to show me they were willing to work together, get along and stop keeping score.

They met my guidelines with angry stares and silence until my little one spoke, "Just so you know we're both going to start calling you Sharon because you're no longer our mom."

The words stung but on a positive note, we were only five minutes into the strike and they were already showing a unified front. The strike lasted only two days, which may seem like a short amount of time, but you'd be amazed at what your children can learn, quickly.

Click here to read why your kids will thank you for doing THIS.

We all shed tears at some point during the two-day strike but there was also more affection and appreciation. And talking, lots and lots of talking. Because I wasn't putting them to bed, they stayed up until midnight. But they also ended up sleeping together, the older brother taking care of the younger one because he was scared.

Not only did my older son step up to the plate when it came time to prepare meals for himself and his brother, he cleaned those plates and put them away.

It broke my heart when my younger son asked me to play with him and I had to reply, "No, I'm on strike." It mended a bit when an hour later he hugged me and said "I never realized how much you play with me and how much fun you are."

My older son sat on my lap and let me stroke his hair as he talked about how hard it is to prepare a meal and all the steps involved. I agreed, nodding my head, "It is a lot of work."

Would I do it again? Absolutely, although, not out of anger. That was wrong on my part. But the outcome was positive and although it hasn't fixed everything, they walked away with a new appreciation of what is done for them on a daily basis and how their dad and I never keep score.

I told my boys I loved being on strike and that I could happily lay around and do nothing but read, write and nap, but truth be told, I was bored by the end of the first day. I'm much more happy when I'm involved but even more so when they are.

Written By: Sharon DeVellis, Yummy Mummy Club

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