Remember how easy it used to be when you could just tell your kids to  do something and they did it. "Pick up your toys...I said now!" and  with an aw mom, off they went to pick up their toys, brush their teeth,  and get ready for bed. It all seemed so effortless. Now, now so much. A  request seemingly simple and benign can turn into all out warfare. "  Honey, can you bring up your laundry that I just washed and folded for  you up to your room? It starts off nice: " In a minute." 30 minutes  later, said a little more strongly: "honey will you take your laundry  upstairs...NOW!"  A reply with attitude "I...SAID....I...WOULD". And the  battle of the wills has begun.
I wish I had some very  astute reasoning and explanation about why your teen won't listen to  you. But mostly its just cause they don't want to, don't feel like, and  don't care about it. You however, care alot about it. You see your teen  as being disrespectful, selfish, and dare I say lazy. All qualities you  find particularly unattractive. You have given this great thought, and  have spent much drive-time trying to figure out how exactly to get your  teen to take responsibility for themselves. They on the other hand have  given it no thought! Again they don't really care if the laundry basket  stays downstairs forever. They will accommodate by throwing dirty  clothes on their bedroom floor instead, and pulling the clean clothes  from the basket downstairs on their way upstairs. See how adaptable they  are.
The only real solution is not to engage in this  power struggle from the get go. Relationships are reciprocal, and if  your teen is not pulling his/her weight in the relationship, then you  too can "accommodate." You make your initial request for whatever you  need your teen to do, understanding that it is unlikely that he/she will  do it on the first try. Perhaps the second round may go a little  differently, maybe using an "I get It'' moment like: Honey I get this is  a pain the a** and not important to you, but I need you to do this  before you go to bed. OK? How can I help you to remember to do it?" At  this point you will probably get a "just leave me alone" I'll do it.! If  this is the case, leave them alone. And if they don't do it, then the  next morning when they need you to do something for them, or that  afternoon when they ask for a ride home from school cause its raining,  or that weekend when they ask for a ride to their friends or 20 bucks to  go to a movie with friends, you can sweetly say: "you know honey, I  would have loved to do that for you, but since you chose not to  take your laundry up the other night, or not to empty the dishwasher, I  guess I am choosing not to pick you up. That's how relationships work. I  love to do things for you and I hope that you like to help me in  return." PERIOD!!! Do not engage in a back and forth on this. As I have  said before, actions speak louder than words. The next time you need  your teen to do something, and you put in the request and you get the  avoidance again, which of course you will, because learning takes time.  You might say, remember when you were so pissed at me last weekend  because I wouldn't give you a ride, just saying, I need you to empty the  dishwasher..your choice." You may have do this a number of times.  Repetition, and consistency are the only way that anyone, not just teens  learn. I have a friend who has been married for 35 years and her  husband STILL does not remember to put down the toilet seat. There have  been many late night pee visits sitting down on that cold porcelain  throne for this woman. Get my drift!!
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