Creative Parenting 101: Presenting the Rules Before The Game Means Fewer Problems in the Second Half

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I got my U.S. Cellular bill on Wednesday and was slightly surprised to see some roaming charges (only $14, but that’s like 2 gallons of gas!) on it from Jim’s last business trip. I encouraged him to use his cell to call us at home because I thought our plan had 75 minutes of roaming included each month.

I was wrong. I called to check into it and we have only 45 roaming minutes included. Okay. Whatever. At least now I know, and I will pay that $14 secure in knowing that I’m not getting ripped off with improper billing.

While I was on the phone with the Customer Service agent who was mostly nice (I wanted to make sure to put that here, just in case a U.S. Cellular executive finds me in his/her periodic blogsearch for customer comments) and helpful, I decided to ask her to analyze our current plan to make sure we’ve got the right one. We’ve got three phones on the account (mine, Jim’s, and the 15-year-old’s) and we don’t go over the allotted minutes, but I just wanted to see where we were at.

She checked our last three months of usage and we decided that I am right where I need to be. All was hunky-dory until she said, “Hmmmm.”

“What?” I asked.

“You know, for $19.99 per month you can have unlimited texting for the whole family.”

I said, “No, that’s okay. We don’t text enough for that.”

She obviously doesn’t know me, because she didn’t stop there and, frankly, said the exact thing that, had I been even slightly wavering on my definitive “No”, would have completely turned me against her regardless of how good the deal was:

“Well, you know it’s what all the teenagers want.”

scream

(Insert Silent Scream here)

I said, “I understand that all the teenagers want that, but the teenagers in my house don’t always get what they want.”

“But it’s UNLIMITED texting, and texting is really the way that most teenagers like to communicate.”

I retorted, “I hear you and I get it, and I even agree. But my teenager does not communicate like that very often. He talks to his friends in person or on the phone, and uses e-mail. In fact, he pays me back for the text messages that he does send out. I am not interested in giving him that kind of free reign. So thanks, but no thanks.”

Then she thanked me for being a fabulous customer, we hung up, and she–no doubt–sat back in her chair and called out, “Hey! Guys! You’re not going to BELIEVE this one…a parent that doesn’t think her teen should have unlimited texting! And her kid pays her back for his texts!!!!!!!”

But that’s okay. I’m fine with being ridiculed by complete strangers who I will never meet and who have no impact on my life whatsoever. I know that I’m doing what works for us.

In fact, when the kid turned fourteen, we decided that it was time to get him a cellphone, not just because he wanted one, but because as the kids are getting older we are often all in different parts of town at once and we needed to be able to communicate if we would be late to pick him up or if we had other miscellaneous issues that would be made easier by being able to communicate. The boy had been begging for a phone for almost two years, and we really just needed to wait until we thought Necessity outweighed Desire by just a bit.

We did decide that, since we were going to get him a phone, we would get him the Razr, which is the one he wanted. He had been dropping major hints about it and we thought it would be nice to get him the kind of phone that he really wanted all along. (You see? We’re not ALL business! LOL)

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If you’ve been a reader for, oh, a minute or two, you won’t be surprised when I tell you that I typed out a list of cell phone rules that we put right there in the gift bag with the phone on his birthday. I wasn’t leaving anything to chance. This way, not only could he keep the rules in his room and refer to them if he wasn’t sure about something, but also more importantly: I would be able to refer him to the paper if he ever broke one of the rules. At that time, he was sometimes “forgetful”, as in “I don’t remember you saying that, Mom” or “You never told me to take out the trash, Dad!”

I was pleasantly surprised when he took the time to read the rules right after opening the phone, and then he looked at me, smiled, and said, “Okay!”

And now, for your reading pleasure, the Rules of the Ring, Wells-style:

1. Take great care of the cellphone. You must (with your own money) go to US Cellular with one of us and get some kind of case for the phone. It will cost about $15-20.

2. If something happens to it (it breaks, gets lost, stolen, whatever), you must tell us IMMEDIATELY. If it’s missing and someone finds it, they could use our account.

3. We have the phone insured, so if something does happen to it, there is a $50 charge to get a new phone, instead of the full price of the phone. You will pay the $50 if this occurs.

4. If you are home, you may not make calls on your cellphone. You must use the landline UNLESS there is a school/homework issue or some other immediate need to make a call while we are using the landline.

5. Although your phone has text messaging capabilities, we would prefer that you don’t text out. Incoming text messages are free, so if you receive them from Julie or any friends, don’t worry about it. If you text out, it will cost 25 cents for each message, which you will pay to us*. Text messages are itemized each month on the bill.

6. You have 8 ringtone credits left for one of the ringtone programs I downloaded to your phone. If you don’t find 8 right away, you don’t HAVE to use them all now; just wait until new ones come out.

7. I put one game on your phone. Any other games that you download (keeping in mind that you have limited memory that must cover all photos, games, and ringtones), you will have to pay for.

8. You may not use more than 400 minutes per month.

9. Should you not be able to pay for any charges that you put on your phone, we will confiscate your phone until you can pay for them.

10. We will pay for the monthly service on the phone. That, along with the insurance on the phone, equals $15/month. We will consider that to be an allowance increase**.

11. When school begins, we reserve the right to confiscate the phone if it becomes a distraction from your schoolwork, or if you abuse the privilege of having the phone.

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The older one, happy to follow the rules we laid out. The younger one, probably thinking “You’d BETTER not ruin this for me!!!”

I am happy to say that in the past *almost two years* that he’s had the phone (other than the two months he overtexted according to our standards), he’s done very, very well with it, only losing it once when it slipped out of his pocket in a Chicago cab as we were getting out to catch a train. He paid the insurance deductible with no argument, and got his replacement phone in the mail. Two days later, the honest cabbie called me by hitting “Mom” on speed dial: he had been hearing the “battery low” tone in his cab for two days before realizing what it was. I sent him postage money and a nice tip, and he sent us the phone!

*Text messages are 20 cents each from U.S. Cellular, and I told him he would pay us 25 cents each. I wanted to discourage him from over-texting and, in fact, I have only collected text money from him twice, in the months when he did almost $10 in texting. I have been really, really pleased that he has kept it under control!

**He had been BEGGING for an increase in allowance for several months and we had been really unwilling at that point to change our budget for that. We thought this was a great compromise!

21 Comments

  • KathyLikesPink

    I live in the sticks – did you know when there is a very low signal, sometime even when it shows as NO SIGNAL, a text will get through when a call will not? We rarely use our cell phones for actual calls, but we text each other when plans change or we need to be picked up from someplace.

    My daughter is 13, I gave her my old cell phone when she was 12. After reading in the news that summer about two separate instances of 13 year old girls being kidnapped and then being rescued because they were able to TEXT their message to their moms. That’s all it took for me!

    My girl has been very responsible with her phone too.

    Love the photo of the brothers, younger gazing at older!

  • Dea

    First – I can’t get over how much your younger son looks like you!!! 😀

    Second – can I save those rules for when my kids turn 14??? I LOVE them. Seriously – you make me feel better about how we parent. People tell us we’re “too strict” and all – but then complete strangers are delighted and compliment us on how well-behaved and respectful our boys are. I LOVE that you’re such awesome parents. You have a lot of respect for your kids – and it shows, because they respect you back!!! 😀

    I’m impressed you were so nice to the lady on the phone – I need to learn how to be nicer when annoyed! LOL!

  • Jules

    They look so young! The good ole days… and BTW, this cracked me up:
    The older one, happy to follow the rules we laid out. The younger one, probably thinking “You’d BETTER not ruin this for me!!!”

    …probably because I remember being 13’s age and giving YOU that look.

  • Colleen

    Again, you rock. I especially love #9. When my kids are older, I will be referring to your blog for parenting advice (“What did I say I’d do again?”), so please, keep it posted for oh, the next 15 years or so. Thanks.

  • SpAzzGiRL

    my sister has become a text-aholic and I had to tell her, “honey, you are too old for that, what do you think you’re 16?” lol
    We are considered the meanest parents in the world because we told our son he can’t have a phone til he’s 13…shocking, right?!

  • Andie

    that is awesome. I still think you should write a parenting book.

    seriously.

    I’ll be honest- I don’t have kids and the prospect to having a kid freaks me out- but you make it seem so easy!

    If you wrote a book, I could follow your guidelines!

  • Kat

    I totally agree. You should definitely write a parenting book. Your kids are great and they are wonderful because they have parents that raised them right.

  • Don Mills Diva

    You are awesome – I hope I’m so creative and thorough when my guy is a teen. That picture of his brother looking at him cracked me up too!

  • Manic Mom

    Whoa, those are some well thought out rules!!!

    And btw, I realized far, far, far, FAR too late that I was wearing the WRONG headgear in my latest video–I screwed up ROYALLY–I SHOULD HAVE PUT ON MY TIARA!!!!!!!!!

  • Melisa

    You guys are great: I totally do not post these things for the compliments, but they sure made my day.

    I think I will eventually put my Creative Parenting tips in the sidebar in their own category. Don’t worry Colleen, I’m not planning on going anywhere for a while! LOL

  • soapbox mom

    These are fantastic rules! I’m copying them, printing them out and giving them to my daughter.

    Thanks!

  • My boys are Army Brats

    What a great set of rules. My boys are way off from having a cell phone but I have wondered how we’d enforce rules with cell phones I love your ideas!

    I came upon your blog by way of becauseisaidso OR manicmommy I’m not sure which!

  • Michelle

    Wow, you are SO my kind of mom! I get the strict parent reactions from other parents, too — and mine are only 2 and 4. But they’re pretty well-behaved….

    I was going to ask at what age you got your boy a cell, but you quite intelligently anticipated my question 🙂 I really hope that we can hold off that long. I’ve heard a lot about parents around here (Barrington) getting phones for their kids at 7 and 8. To me, that’s nuts!

    And I love the rules. One of the things I’ve always said when I was raising kids is that for birthdays (as they got older — we aren’t quite there yet), presents would include additional “privileges” that would come in boxes with the rules around them. Sounds like you’re already doing something very similar!

  • me & them

    *hyperventilates*

    I’m so amazed he stuck to it – he’s such a credit to you. Honestly – it took my racking up a $400 bill from texting to realized what a fool I was, and since then I’m under my limit’s allowed on my plan. I think I terrified my mother for that month, but it was the best way to learn as I paid it back from my allowance (way back when).

    I love that you think so much in advance and can anticipate your kids so well 🙂

  • me & them

    *hyperventilates*

    I’m so amazed he stuck to it – he’s such a credit to you. Honestly – it took my racking up a $400 bill from texting to realized what a fool I was, and since then I’m under my limit’s allowed on my plan. I think I terrified my mother for that month, but it was the best way to learn as I paid it back from my allowance (way back when).

    I love that you think so much in advance and can anticipate your kids so well 🙂

  • me & them

    *hyperventilates*

    I’m so amazed he stuck to it – he’s such a credit to you. Honestly – it took my racking up a $400 bill from texting to realized what a fool I was, and since then I’m under my limit’s allowed on my plan. I think I terrified my mother for that month, but it was the best way to learn as I paid it back from my allowance (way back when).

    I love that you think so much in advance and can anticipate your kids so well 🙂

  • Melisa

    Michelle: Congrats on being able to comment today! LOL
    I don’t know why you weren’t able to before, but I’m glad whatever it was fixed itself! All I can say is, Stay the Course! I think that many parents give up on the way they originally intend to raise their kids because it gets hard and they don’t want to deal with it, but the rewards are well worth it. I agree about age 7 or 8 being too young; in my opinion, that’s more of a Want than a Need. (and an unnecesary expense!)

    Katie: But you did learn, and that’s what’s important! (are you still wearing the tiara?) 🙂

  • flickrlovr

    You sound EXACTLY like my Mom. She had me agree to a little family contract like the one you laid out here, and we never had any problems. The worst thing I did was download a couple of games back in the day before realizing how expensive they were, and I had to pay them back for those…
    I don’t think I got my cell phone until I was 16 or so.

  • Mama Smurf

    I hope you don't mind but I'm totally printing these rules up and handing them to my son when he gets home from school! Thanks for doing the hard part for me! LOL! I also did not get the unlimited texting for him. For $5 more I got him 200 texts per month. There was a $20 difference to get unlimited which seemed a little ridiculous to me. Keeping my fingers crossed that I won't be "that" dilusional mom that receives a $1000 phone bill next month!