Friday, April 13, 2007

We did boot camp over the weekend: no talking, no yummy food (just the basics), chore duty, and rather rigid expectations of obedience. It was awful. It was worth it.

. . . for institutionalized children, giving more than the least is
an offering of love
that will not be noticed, appreciated, or requited,
so giving the least is the safest bet.


Garbanzo is usually a really good worker, usually does a good job with minimal supervision. This weekend he did really poor work which just keep extending his time in boot camp. When it became obvious that he was doing poor work as an act of defiance (which is what got him into boot camp in the first place) we talked it over.

In the orphanage, with rotating care-givers, the children learn to give the most efficient (aka the least) amount of respect and obedience that they need to without losing access to food and warmth. So Garbanzo has six years of fine-tuning his ability to be in a constantly-diminishing state of compliance. This is a coping skill that makes sense for institutionalized children. Giving more than the least is an offering of love that will not be noticed, appreciated, or requited, so giving the least is the safest bet.

When I put this in front of Garbanzo (in simpler language) he affirmed that this is how it is in the orphanage. We call it orphanage-thinking.

Then we talked about how, in a family, we give our best. The children often ask me why I am eating something different than what they are eating. We only had enough of the super-yummy stuff for them, so I eat something not quite as lovely. I give my best to my family. We have lots of examples of this, and Garbanzo really got excited about listing them all. We call this family-thinking.

Then we got to talk about how families love each other and are each other's special people. This is also family-thinking.

Garbanzo is a logical kiddo, so he quickly got the next part. Can we take family-thinking, having a mama and papa that are just yours etc., into the orphanage? How would that work? "Only sad," Garbanzo answered. Family-thinking won't work in the orphanage and will leave us sad.

How about taking orphanage-thinking, giving-our-least, into the family? How will that work? Garbanzo is nodding his head at this point. "I have to learn new thinking."

So, boot camp got his attention and let him know how seriously we take defiance, and we walked out with a new tool, "Garbanzo, give us your best respect and obey, remember, families give each other their best."

We also stumbled on chore camp in the process. A job poorly done lands one in chore camp, where one gains new chores until one's work ethic returns.

Friday, April 6, 2007

boot camp


I do confess that I am having a hard time with Garbanzo. All my clever parenting tricks work for about a week, and then he starts to slide. Then I spend my days being the enforcer, which leaves me drained and crabby and not real fun for The Gift to come home to.

So, I've been reading other blogs and listserves and resources. I'd like your comments, input, etc. on this posting, which echoes something we have done. We called it Martial Law, but I am re-thinking it and considering morphing it into Boot Camp. The posting is copied with the gracious permission of the author and is slightly abridged from the original

I called it "punishment camp" on the list though sometimes the kids and we refer to it as "prison camp." They are treated as if they were prisoners. Meaning, you don't speak unless you are spoken to. You don't have any privileges whatsoever. You eat what you are given. There are no snacks. There are no luxuries. You ask permission for everything, even going to the bathroom. I know this all sounds extreme but it works and some times behaviors have to justify it.

We haven't had to do this too many times but boy the results stick for ages. They remain in prison camp for as long as necessary. Usually they are out w/in a couple hours and the message & lesson are very well learned. They essentially do nonstop chores until there time is up. Pulling weeds, vacuuming baseboards, lots of cleaning stuff you usually only do for spring cleaning.

If there is no whining, no complaining and job done right, then they are released. Some get released earlier than others. I've only had one time in the history of starting this that I had all the kids in it at the same time. It is a pain for us as parents trying to come up w/ some things but we manage. The kids absolutely despise this so it definitely has an impact. They hate not having freedom.

I'm serious when I say no talking, no privileges.

One time I went so far as to make toast and water for breakfast. They knew I was serious. I make it clear to them that if they behave badly they will end up in prison for real. They all say if this is like real prison, we will never lie, cheat, etc. (whatever the offense was) ever again. I want the message clear as day that bad behavior in real life once older will have much more serious consequences than just doing chores all day.

None of these chores are what I'd call hard labor. Like I said spring cleaning stuff. What they don't like is they have to keep doing it. This is only done w/ extreme behavior problems.

Yet, all I have to do is mention it if we are in a car and behavior seems to be fine at our destination. I'll say in the car, if you can't behave at XYZ, then what will happen when we get home. Six of the voices( one can't talk yet) all say together punishment camp. So, we then have a pleasant dinner out, or bbq w/ friends, etc. It took us awhile to find something that worked.

Being the warden is tough b/c I literally have to give up whatever I'm doing to play warden and make sure they are doing wha they are supposed to be doing. Urghh. But, worth it in the end to have cooperative, respectful kids.

We used to make them run laps but that was never successful. They'd just laugh the whole time running and try to play tag.

Like I said, you have to find what works for all your kids. For us, doing chores nonstop seemed to help. And no luxuries such as soda or chips for lunch. If they are in prison camp, meals are kept very simple, boring. No good stuff as the kids would say. They finish one chore, they go onto the next. No stopping except at meals.

I figure if they can play nonstop all day, they are capable of doing chores nonstop all day. One time, I had them sort socks. At our home w/ 9 people, it's a nightmare job that everyone in the family hates to do.

This won't work for everyone. But we have 7 very individual children w/ some severe behavioral, mental and emotional issues. We found something that worked and we've used it since.

The reward system never worked at our house. We tried over and over again per recommendation of our neurologist/psychologists, etc. This works and our neuro said [name removed], if you ever find something that works, you stick to it! So we have. Well, that's the jist of it. Basically find what works and stick to it. I wish you all the best. Maybe we should have others chime in what works for their kids.

With lots of ideas, one might work for another family. What do you think??

Take care,



So, what do you think? Have you done anything similar? What cautions, concerns, encouragements, or advice do you have to share?