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Punishment: gone too far, or fair enough? Internet is divided on whether it is ever okay to make your child eat from dirty dishes
This was the dilemma faced by one Reddit user, who found herself at her wit's end with her 17-year-old son's laziness.
“Our family rotates chores - cooking, dishes, cleaning common areas are all done by each family member on different days. My son hates chores and always tries to half a** it to get out of doing it. It’s been a constant battle. Dishes are the worst. He overpacks the dishwasher so the dish detergent can’t even get on the dishes. It just catches on whatever pan he shoved in front. He also doesn’t rinse the dishes at all, so they come out dirty and caked in food. If we want to eat the day after he does dishes, we end up having to hand wash them. He doesn’t care. Any attempt to talk to him is met with a little smirk and he would say, but the dishwasher sanitised it. He knows exactly what he’s doing.”
The punishment a mum inflicted on her 17 year old son has divided the internet
After constantly battling with him over his halfhearted efforts to do the dishes, she decided to take matters into her own hands.
The next day, after he had yet again failed to do the dishes properly, she made him eat his dinner off of a dirty plate.
"He went pale and started protesting that it was gross," she wrote. "I quickly cut him off and reminded him that the dishwasher sanitised them."
The son eventually relented and found the least disgusting dish to eat off of.
"I felt bad - he looked so sick and grossed out," the mother said. "But I was sick of him wasting time and water and detergent."
Unsurprisingly, the Internet was divided on whether this was an acceptable form of punishment.
"NTA (an acronym for 'Not the A-hole). Actions have consequences, and your son learned he can't half-ass his responsibilities and get no consequence for it," wrote one user.
A second agreed: "He's almost old enough to vote and still acts like a toddler. He can't get away with being a disgusting, lazy slob and expect to be treated with respect when he disregards the shared tasks and responsibilities in the same household."
"Yep, it would be pretty gross to eat from the dishes. I guess it is possible that bacteria would make him ill. Not probable enough to be serious. Actions have consequences. Good and bad," wrote another.
However, not everyone was convinced that this was an effective or appropriate form of discipline.
"Little bit too far making him actually eat off the dish. But just a little bit. Yes your reaction was appropriate in leaving him out of dinner and not giving him dishes but going so far as to make him eat something that may still have had dish soap in it was just a wee bit over," wrote one user.
Another said: "Ummm, I feel like asking him to hand wash the dishes he was to eat off of would have been sufficient. But to make him eat off dirty dishes is unsanitary and as a parent, I feel like you have to be better than that."
"ESH. (an acronym for Everyone Sucks Here) I know everyone's saying NTA, and I do think harsh punishment is justified...but eating off dirty plates and watching your son look sick while eating seems too far. It would've been less of an a-hole move to punish him in a more humane way (grounded for a long time, removal of phone/laptop/videogames, etc)," wrote another.
So what do you think? Is this an acceptable form of discipline, or did the mother go too far? Share your thoughts with us in the comments below!
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