15 answers

12 Yr Old

help in getting my 12 yr.old to stop swearing

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

Hi C.!

As a Mother of three grown boys, I know what you are going through. I raised them by myself, so I had many challenges. We had a "swear jar" Whenever my sons used an inappropriate word, (even Mom) we had to put a quarter in the jar. Start with what you think might be an appropriate amount. I would ask for their input too. If they are getting an allowance, I would start high! If that doesn't work, then up the anti to a dollar. When they start losing money real quick they learn very fast. You can decide what to do with the money. Either give it to charity or some family that might use it. Don't give it back to them. They have to feel the pain!! Hope that helps, it worked for me. Mother of 3 grown men,( I wish they were here and little again) and a young daughter!
Tracey

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

Hi C.!

As a Mother of three grown boys, I know what you are going through. I raised them by myself, so I had many challenges. We had a "swear jar" Whenever my sons used an inappropriate word, (even Mom) we had to put a quarter in the jar. Start with what you think might be an appropriate amount. I would ask for their input too. If they are getting an allowance, I would start high! If that doesn't work, then up the anti to a dollar. When they start losing money real quick they learn very fast. You can decide what to do with the money. Either give it to charity or some family that might use it. Don't give it back to them. They have to feel the pain!! Hope that helps, it worked for me. Mother of 3 grown men,( I wish they were here and little again) and a young daughter!
Tracey

1 mom found this helpful

Agree with choosing a consequence and make it stick.

Does he get an allowance? Make him pay X amount into a jar (that's visible) every time he uses a vulgarity. Take something he loves away for X amount time.

And contrary to popular belief, a little soft-soap to wash out his mouth if nothing else works can be enough of a shock to make him realize you're serious.

1 mom found this helpful

I know what you're going through. I too have a 12 yr. old who's using word that I don't use around the house any more, but the fact that we've been dealing with the death of my husband (their father) hasn't helped matters any. Also what doesn't help is the fact that we can't control who they see at school and I know that if the parents of those kids were to find out what kind of words their children are using would send them into a fit. I like the suggestion of a "cuss" jar, but take it a little farther. Add to that jar a punishment jar. For every word that they have to pay for, they will have to remove one slip from the punishment jar. Set a limit as to how long each offense will be. Example, first offense 3 day, second 7, third 10 until you have about a month taken up. Now, knowing boys (I have three right now) just the punishment won't be enough, you'll need to add a chore to go along with that. Doing dishes, taking out the trash, cleaning the bathroom, cleaning the kitchen, doing his laundry and so on during that time will also help. Also, at some point the child will run out of money, so just have them draw twice out of the punishment jar. Before I forget, make sure that you write down what they punishment is and how long it's for. Post it somewhere where everyone in the house can see it. This will drive home what they did and how it as affected their little lives.

1 mom found this helpful

I think what people have suggested to you so far is great. But figure out what he really enjoys and tell him everytime he swears you will be taking away those things for a length of time. One or two weeks. For example: if he likes to go to a neighbors a play basket ball, watching tv, having a stereo in his room, hanging out with a friend, early bed set etc. What ever you think will get the message across. He is swearing because he knows that you are not going to do any thing about it most likely, so it is VERY important that you follow through. Don't argue with him just take away, end of discussion. Good Luck you can do it!!!! I promise he will stop when he see's your serious. PROMISE... :-)

1 mom found this helpful

We have been going through family therapy with my step children and the therapist we have seen suggest rewarding positive not focusing on consequences (the negative). For example if you do jar methods as suggested then you would need to switch the focus to when there is not swearing..your child would get the reward then. Try to ignore the swearing or just give a look. One thing we did was have our daughter look up other words in the dictionary she could use, and we tried to make light of it. We also use a coupon system in our house. Whenever the kids do something positive and it sometimes is as simple as using their manners, we give a coupon and say nice manners. We then have a sheet that lists what they can cash in the coupns for, for instance 10 coupons equals x amount of time on the computer. We save consequences or pointing out negative things for more "serious crimes". It really works, they sometimes even try to find positive/helpful things to do. We made our coupons on the computer and labeled them positive behavior coupons. My step children do not swear at our house anymore, and they treat us with respect. My step son lives with us full time, and step daughter part time. When they are at their mothers house she reports very poor behavior, but she does not follow through and typically focuses on the "bad". I can't say we don't have relapses, that happens with all things in life. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

First, make sure ALL the adults and older children in his life are not swearing. He may be doing it to be "cool" or rebel, but it may just have crept its way into his vocabulary. (My son is 1, so my husband and I are starting to censor ourselves!).

Also, watch tv shows and movies he watches, and listen to the radio stations he listens to. Is there a lot of swearing?

Lastly, pick a consequence for when he swears, and stick to it. (Maybe no t.v. for 2 days, or no telephone, or whatever is applicable.) Put it in writing and show it to him, and then post it on the fridge.

It won't fly with an (almost) teenager that he can't swear when others in the household can, so consider a "swear jar" or something like that for the adults.

Good luck, and know that this is a phase!

1 mom found this helpful

C.,

Swearing can sometimes make kids feel powerful, older or cool. Did he learn it a home? At school? Via movies/TV? If he learned at home, the obvious is to set the example you want to see. If it's from movies/TV, that would need to be monitored or curtailed. If from school/friends, the best you can do is deliver consequences in a calm, cool manner...in fact, your response could well have a big impact on how long he continues to do so.

I highly recommend reading:

Parenting with Love & Logic...Foster Cline, Jim Fay

Transforming the Difficult Child: The Nurtured Heart Approach...Howard Glasser

Both can be found at:

http://thecouragetochange.com/products.html

Good luck! Wishing you much success.

W.
www.kidlutions.com

hm. i dont know!
patience, simply saying, you need to respect my rules and though im aware of what your friends are saying, and that you may say those things out of my houes, you will NOT use them in my house or presence.
i dont know. basically kids learn by example. if you are swearing, you need to work on stopping as well. if you swear and he calls your bluff by saying, "why should i stop when you do it" tell him that it is something you know is wrong and you are working on limiting swearing as well.

my 14 year old brother (:D) tells me to take away privileges. i guess i would recommend first taking away the privelege of going out with friends, if that is allowed. for each offence, one event should be taken away i would think. or one week of events ? something. you CAN and SHOULD have the power to remove him even from sports practice, with communication with the coaches that this is something you need to do as his parent and that his status in the team shouldnt have to suffer. maybe per offence you can just keep him out of ONE practice?

then go to other things... taking away tv privileges at home, gaming priviliges, computer, etc. of course, the reason why i mentioned removing the right to go out first is that if you tell him he cant watch movies or play video games, and he goes to a friends, hes just going to be able to do it there right?

anyway good luck. kids are kids and eventually, i believe, everyone swears. its part of them wanting to be like the adults in their life, because they swear.
so its someething we ALL should work on.

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.