Dad reports:
Last night deserves a special note toward Tommy’s recent behavior. Tommy really enjoys his time with his grandparents. They have to move his greatgrandmother’s belongings into a new nursing home. Tommy talks to his grandfather who says “if you help, you can stay the night.” (Friday nights are Tommy’s nights at the grandparents). I’m ready to head out and I ask Tommy, “Are you going?” He flatly replies “nope.” So I go outside and secure the trailer to the Jeep. I need to make one more trip inside and there stays Tommy shoes and socks in hand saying “I changed my mind.”
Once at the grandparents house we are trying to figure out how to get the trailer loaded and Tommy starts playing in a pile of dirt. A quick scolding from his grandmother and he stops. Later he will be found near the dirt but not in it. When questioned “what are you doing over there?” He responds monotonously, “I’m staring at the dirt. I like staring at dirt.” He wouldn’t stay out of stuff in the garage. When asked to take some small items to the backseat of the car (2 trips) he made one trip then suddenly had to go to the bathroom. I even confronted him on that one saying, “you know, that looked like you were using the bathroom to get out of some very simple work” to which he snaps, “I WASN’T!”
We finally get everything from the trailer and car into the new nursing home. Tommy helped unload but worked extra hard to try to do idiotic or annoying things. Once done, his grandparents explained that they had to pick up his greatgrandmother at 10am and Tommy replied, “I don’t want to wake up before 10am.” Much discussion about “are you going to be a problem” “why don’t you want to help” etc and finally I asked, “Tommy are you staying with your grandparents or coming home to walk the dog?” He decided home.
How do you motivate someone when they no longer care about the things that used to matter the most to them?