“Why does this oatmeal always taste scorched?” Lily frowned, nudging her plate aside with clear distaste. Emily, caught in the morning rush to prepare for work, balanced a whirlwind of tasks: dressing her older son for middle school and readying her younger daughter for daycare.
“This oatmeal’s not for me,” Ethan stated firmly, pushing it away. “It’s kid stuff.”
“You’re the kid!” Lily snapped, her eyes narrowing at her brother.
Their bickering escalated quickly, voices rising as they exchanged pointed jabs.
“Ethan, enough! You’re older, so act it,” Emily urged, her words barely cutting through the noise. Ethan kept up his taunts, and Lily, overwhelmed, dissolved into tears.
“Stop it!” Emily declared, extending her hand. “Give me your phone. No devices for three days.”
With no time for lengthy discussions about behavior, Emily took Ethan’s smartphone, handed him his backpack, and gestured to the door. “Move, or you’ll be late for school,” she said sternly.
“I’m not going without my phone!” Ethan shot back, meeting her gaze.
“One week. No devices at all,” Emily countered, holding firm.
“But why does Lily always win?” Ethan started to argue.
“One more word, and it’s two weeks,” she warned, her tone unwavering.
Grudgingly, Ethan accepted his consequence and left for school.
“What about breakfast? Can you make different oatmeal?” Lily asked, surprised, as Emily knelt to tie her sneakers.
“No, you’ll eat at daycare today,” Emily responded, securing the laces.
“The food there’s awful,” Lily grumbled, pouting.
“Then today’s a no-food day,” Emily said with a small smile, knowing Lily usually loved daycare meals. She recognized these morning outbursts stemmed from her children’s growing sense of entitlement. Emily felt the family’s strained dynamic was the root of it all.