Dialogues · Everyday

“Did you take money from my wallet?”

Sometimes confronting the teen, sometimes vice versa. Honest answer is the only repair; defensive answer destroys it.

Line art of a wallet on a kitchen counter, a teen and parent on either side
For ages
10–1213–1516–18
Topics
Lying & TrustMoney & AllowanceFamily Conflict
I.
The scene

What's happening.

Your 14-year-old, defensive but talking: “Mom — did you go into my wallet? My $40 from babysitting is gone.” You think about it. You did, last week, for gas.

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

What? No. Your sister probably.

Teen

I asked her. She didn't.

Parent

Well I didn't either. You probably spent it and forgot.

Teen

(learns: parents lie when it's small; the family currency of trust just dropped)

  • Blaming a sibling is the small lie that opens the door to bigger ones. The teen will compare notes later and you'll be caught.
  • “You probably spent it and forgot” is gaslighting at the household scale, and teens detect it perfectly.
  • The trust cost of this lie is FAR larger than the trust cost of borrowing $40 without asking. Don't trade.
III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

Yeah. I did. I borrowed it for gas last week and forgot to tell you. I'm sorry — that wasn't mine to take without asking. Here's $40, plus $5 because that was rude of me. Going forward, the rule applies both ways: if any of us borrows from another's wallet, we say so immediately. Deal?

Teen

...okay. Yeah. Deal.

  • “Yeah. I did.” immediately preserves the trust currency that's at stake — much more valuable than the $40.
  • Adding $5 for the inconvenience is the small gesture that makes the apology real to the teen, not just words.
  • Stating the rule applies both ways teaches household norms more effectively than any one-direction lecture could.
IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

  • Yeah. I did. I'm sorry — that wasn't mine to take without asking.
  • Here's [the amount] plus [a little extra] because that was rude of me.
  • Going forward, the rule applies both ways: if any of us borrows from another's wallet, we say so immediately.
  • Deal?

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