| It's the end of April. How many coats has your 
            child lost this year? I remember, as a child, my brother losing at 
            least two coats a year. My mother was very frustrated. When a child 
            is serially careless with his or her personal items it can be 
            inconvenient, expensive and increasingly irritating. 
            One mom told me that her son is always 
            losing something -- his coat, his notebook, his basketball shoes, 
            you name it. "It's getting so I'm always reminding him to check to 
            make sure he has all his stuff," she said. "But I think I'm just 
            training him to rely on me to remember it all." She has a good point. How can we 
            teach our children to keep track of their own belongings? Tools I have a few suggestions to help the chronically careless. First, 
            look at this issue as a life skill you are teaching your child. He 
            won't always have his mom and dad to check his stuff, run back to 
            the school to pick up his coat or remind him to leave his belongings 
            in a safe place. He needs to learn to do this for himself. 
            
             Expect some mistakes. Keeping track of his belongings is a habit 
            your child must establish, and no one acquires new habits quickly. Have a talk with him about which items 
            he must remember. Ask him for his ideas on how he can keep track of 
            them better. He might come up with such suggestions as: 
              Always put his coat in the same 
              place.Put a list in his gym bag so he 
              can check it before leaving. Make a habit of noticing when he does remember his coat, 
            and comment on it: "Good job, you remembered your coat." Refrain from reminding or scolding -- and don't rescue him by 
            replacing lost items. Let him be responsible for coping with the 
            loss. It's his problem, not yours. [to top of second 
            column in this article] | 
            
             If your child simply doesn't care about keeping track of her 
            things and doesn't mind inconveniencing you, then a consequence is 
            in order. Here are a few ideas for logical consequences, drawn from 
            my book, "Go to 
            Your Room!: Consequences That Teach." 
              Whenever possible, don't replace the item. Let your child 
              experience the loss of a favorite or useful item.If you must replace the item (it's too cold to go without a 
              coat), then require your child to pay for it. If she doesn't have 
              money, sell something of hers to pay for a replacement (maybe two 
              video games or something like that). This consequence can be very 
              effective for a repeat offender.If the item is retrievable, the child must pay for the gas it 
              takes to get it.Consider withholding an outing that calls for a coat. This material has been adapted from "Go to Your Room!: 
            Consequences That Teach" by Shari Steelsmith. Copyright Parenting Press,
            www.ParentingPress.com. 
            Republished by permission. 
            
            
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                Life Sentence, No Parole 
                If we tried to invent the 
                cruelest punishment for dogs, we probably couldn't come up with 
                anything worse than "solitary confinement" on a chain or in a 
                kennel. 
                Dogs are pack animals who 
                crave the companionship of others.  Scratches behind the ears, 
                games of fetch, or even just walks around the block mean the 
                world to them.  Curling up at your feet while you watch TV is 
                their idea of heaven. 
                Many dogs left to fend for 
                themselves at the end of a chain fall prey to attacks by other 
                animals or cruel people, and many others are injured or hanged 
                or choke as a result of getting entangled or caught in their 
                tether. 
                If you have a backyard dog, 
                please, bring him or her inside.  They don't want much--just 
                you. A public 
                service announcement from Lincoln Daily News and
                 helpinganimals.com |  |