E
exnihilo
Guest
I’ll offer my opinion which comes from experiencing life more like your son. Some have suggested your son is an alcoholic. I don’t know about that. It sounds like he has a drinking problem, but if I had to guess the drinking is a solution to his real problem.
His real problem likely is divorce. It is having a step mother and having a live in boyfriend. He very likely feels unwanted. Divorce is really hard on kids. It doesn’t matter what the parents think about it. It is. Their problem just beings the day of the divorce. The kids can’t express their feelings about it. They can’t say they don’t like the stepmother or boyfriend, who probably doesn’t like them as much as they would their own flesh and blood. They have to suck it up and act like everything is OK.
The boy is at an age where these things come to a head. He is at an age where he can get into real trouble. If you just try to crack down on him you’ll likely fail to help him. You need to gently and slowly work on him. The first thing you have to do is make him feel loved and wanted. You have to make him feel loved and wanted because he is valuable no matter what he does. He’ll probably do more stupid things, as do most young men. But he has no stability. He has no foundation. He is floundering around because he’s never had stability. If you suddenly impose some strict routine he’ll probably perceive that as a lack of love.
Those are my thoughts. I don’t actually know your situation. I could be wrong. But I’ve seen and experienced enough to feel fairly confident at least some of what I wrote is true.
His real problem likely is divorce. It is having a step mother and having a live in boyfriend. He very likely feels unwanted. Divorce is really hard on kids. It doesn’t matter what the parents think about it. It is. Their problem just beings the day of the divorce. The kids can’t express their feelings about it. They can’t say they don’t like the stepmother or boyfriend, who probably doesn’t like them as much as they would their own flesh and blood. They have to suck it up and act like everything is OK.
The boy is at an age where these things come to a head. He is at an age where he can get into real trouble. If you just try to crack down on him you’ll likely fail to help him. You need to gently and slowly work on him. The first thing you have to do is make him feel loved and wanted. You have to make him feel loved and wanted because he is valuable no matter what he does. He’ll probably do more stupid things, as do most young men. But he has no stability. He has no foundation. He is floundering around because he’s never had stability. If you suddenly impose some strict routine he’ll probably perceive that as a lack of love.
Those are my thoughts. I don’t actually know your situation. I could be wrong. But I’ve seen and experienced enough to feel fairly confident at least some of what I wrote is true.