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8 year old stealing how can i make her stop?
I am so embarrassed, I am sitting here with tears in my eyes as I write this so much so i can hardly see letters on the keyboard. For the third time in as many weeks I have caught my 8 year old stealing money from me.it was �20 3 weeks ago. �5 two weeks ago and today �60 from my purse. The first time I explained that the money she had taken and spent with her "friends" in the local arcade was money set aside to pay school dinner money for herself and her brothers for the month and that it took a long time to earn �20, that it was a lot of money and we simply couldn't afford to spend that amount of money in an arcade. the second time she bought herself a magazine, chewing gum and a bottle of ribena. i explained that if she asked I would have given her the money for a magazine, There is always juice in the cupboard, and since an incident involving chewing gum and hair we all agreed not to have gum. I gave her the same speech about how long it takes to earn that sort of money and that you can feed our family of 6 for a day with what she had just spent. I told her once again that stealing from family was wrong and that this behaviour would not be tolerated. Then today we had organised to go out to a local family event day but when we came to leave we couldnt find her, she'd gone out to play and so I took the two boys and my husband stayed at home with the baby to wait for her. she came back shortly after we had left and said she was getting a drink and going back out to play with her friends.Its only looking back that my husband realised that she didn't even get a drink as he was in the kitchen. instead she went into my bedroom opened my bag took out my purse and took �60 from it. She then took it to the arcades and treated herself and her friends to untold amounts of fun!. Can't help wondering what I've done wrong to make her like this. Feel like a complete failure on the mother front. If you have any advice please help thanks pam
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No best answer has yet been selected by PamelaChurch. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What I'm really concerned about here is the amount that your daughter is stealing from you, it seems an AWFUL lot of money. Is there any chance at all that she is being co-erced or even bullied into taking the money? Maybe she is doing it to 'buy' friendships? You really need to sit down and have a good talk with her and find out WHY she is stealing this money.
Maybe once you have sorted this problem out you could give her weekly pocket money which she could spend on what she likes, it will make her feel a little more grown up and possibly also give her a bit of sense of the value of money, you know, working out that if she buys that magazine this week she can't also afford six icecream, that sort of thing.
Good luck on sorting this out.
I'm in agreement with the others that this behaviour does not reflect on you. It sounds like you're an involved and caring parent.
I agree that she needs to be sanctioned. For a start she should not be going to the arcades. But also she needs to personally feel the consequences of her actions. I do not mean smacking her. Whilst children can seem very grown up at her age and able to take full responsibility for their actions they are not in fact fully morally mature. At 8 a child will be able to understand behaviour as bad or good. What they lack is moral relativism. This usually develops between 10 and 13.
She is highly unlikely to be able to rank naughty behaviour from bad to worst. As such she may genuinely not understand that stealing from you is worse than say arguing with her siblings. She is unlikely to understand your basic economics lessons in how long it takes to earn the money for things.
One suggestion might be to look through her things with her and put a price on them �5 for a teddy etc. and then add up enough toys / favourite clothes etc. to cover what she has taken. This might help bring the amount home to her. You could consider confiscating these belongings and allowing her to 'earn' them back through good behaviour.
You also want her to understand how much she has hurt you. When I was little and upset my Mum her tactic was to tell us that she loved us and always would but that right now she didn't like us much at all and didn't want to spend time with us. It was a final tactic but always worked on all three of us. With the reassurance she loved us stopping us from being too scared.
As well I'm sure you want to know why. Other people who have answered have suggested bullying. That is a possibility. Children can be horrid to each other. What did she think would happen if she didn't take money? If she thought that the other girls wouldn't play with her then did she think this as one or more of them told her that this was the case?
If so then there are a couple of things you could try. 1, Remove temptation. Hide your money. 2, Try to get her to play with other children - if she sits with this group at school have a word with the teacher about moving her so she can meet others. 3, speak to the parents. Don't necessarily be accusative but give them a friendly warning that the girls have been caught taking money from you to spend in the arcade. If their daughters aren't allowed there alone then they'll want to know. Also if you are cut off as a source of money then their funds may be at risk. Say you suspect bullying but you don't know who and suggest checking that no-one is pressuring their kids. This will help get the message of how seriously it is being taken into the group.
If she isn't being bullied or won't say she is then ask why she felt she had to take it. It may be that she is insecure about how fun she is to be around. A distinct possibility is that she enjoyed being able to give gifts and felt popular as a result. I bet they all loved her when she turned up with funds for the day. People, not just children, can be terribly shallow and I bet it felt great to be the one everyone wanted to be friends with. If this is the case then there are two possible tactics that I can see.
1, explain about real friendship and how it doesn't depend on having nice things to give. But is about being kind and nice no matter what toys / money you have. Ask her if she has any friends like this. If so then encourage her to spend time with these friends.
Final part, honest!
2 agree that it is nice to give and that you like that feeling too. Talk about birthdays and christmas and how nice it is to see people like what you've picked. Then say that you can give without spending. Perhaps a reward for a sustained period of good behaviour could be you agreeing to take her and her friends out for a picnic - cheap and you'd get to see how they play. It would show her that she can give treats such as an invitation at little financial cost. Or let her have a special friend or two stay over. Help her see that friends will value her for who she is and not what she can give them in terms of material goods.
Finally you mentioned a baby. Could this rebellious behaviour be part of her reacting to the presence of a new demand on your time? It is possible that through no falut of yours she is feeling neglected / unimportant. Try to involve her as much as you can with things you do with the baby - talk about how nice it is for the baby to have a big sister to look after him / her and how important she is to the baby. But also try to make time for just you / your husband and her.
A fair few people go through this type of phase at some point. The peak age for female offending is around 14 and a lot of that is petty theft from shops - make up clothes etc. The vast majority then go on to be perfectly law abiding citizens. If you nip it in the bud there seems no reason for you not to have a happy ending too.
Best of luck!
We sat down and talked about why she felt she had to take monet from me. her answer was she wanted to impress the other children. I explained that if they were true friends then they didn't need impressing. She has lots of friends her own age but they live in the next village. So we have agreed that if she shows that I can trust her she will be allowed to bring a friend home for tea two nights a week and have one to sleep over every third weekend. ( had to promise the two boys the same I must be mad!) We talked about her position in the family and i asked how she felt at not been the youngest anymore to which she replyed she wasn't all that bothered as The baby was too young to be spoiled and she knew that I love all of my children the same but then went on to say that she thinks i spend too much time with her and not enough with the two boys. Again thankyou for all your help and advice greatly appreciated Pamxx
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