Curtis (Host): Hey everyone, welcome back to the show. I’m Curtis — and as always, I’ve got my partner‑in‑parenting‑crime, RJ, here with me. RJ (Co‑Host): What’s up, folks? Happy to be back. Curtis told me today’s topic is accountability for 11‑year‑olds, which is perfect because I’ve already survived raising two kids — Josh and Amanda — and I’ve got the emotional scars to prove it. Curtis: He really does. RJ is basically our “I’ve lived through it, let me tell you what not to do” expert. And today we’re diving into something every parent hits eventually: teaching accountability without turning your home into a full‑time negotiation arena. Because 11-year-olds? They’re in that magical stage where they want independence… but also forget their lunch, their homework, and sometimes their entire sense of logic. RJ: Josh once left the house without shoes. Just socks. I said, “Buddy, where are your shoes?” and he said, “I don’t know, but we’re late.” Like that was my problem. Curtis: Exactly. So today we’re talking about a calmer, smarter approach: natural consequences. What they are, how they work, and how to use them without feeling like you’re being too harsh… or too “sure, whatever, chaos is fine.” Let’s get into it. 🎧 [MUSIC FADES OUT] Segment 1: What Accountability Actually Means at 11 Curtis: Accountability at 11 doesn’t mean your kid suddenly becomes a responsible adult who remembers everything and puts dishes in the dishwasher like a civilized human. It’s really just: “My choices have outcomes — and I’m part of that.” RJ: And this is the age where they start questioning everything. “That’s not fair.” “It wasn’t my fault.” “Gravity did it.” Amanda once blamed the air for knocking her water bottle over. Curtis: And honestly? That questioning is good. Their brain is levelling up. RJ: Yeah, Amanda at 11 could debate like she was trying to get into law school. I’d say, “Why didn’t you clean your room?” and she’d say, “Define clean.” I mean… she had a point. Curtis: Instead of shutting it down with “Because I said so,” try: “What do you think will happen if you choose that?” Now you’re building decision-making skills, not just compliance. Segment 2: Natural Consequences vs. Punishment Curtis: Let’s talk about the big shift: moving from punishment to natural consequences. Punishment is something you create. Natural consequences are something that just… happen. RJ: Like when Josh refused to bring a jacket because “I’m not cold.” Spoiler: he was cold. Suddenly, jackets were the hottest trend of the season. Curtis: Or forgetting homework and having to explain it to the teacher. You’re not the bad guy — life is doing the teaching. RJ: And it saves you from becoming the “lecture parent.” Nobody wants to be that guy. Curtis: Of course, safety first. We’re not letting kids “learn naturally” by touching hot stoves. But for everyday stuff? Natural consequences are powerful. Segment 3: Why Parents Struggle With This Curtis: Here’s the honest part — this approach feels uncomfortable at first. RJ: Because parents are professional rescuers. We see a problem and we swoop in like, “Don’t worry, I’ll fix it!” Curtis: But every time we rescue them, we take away a learning opportunity. RJ: When Amanda forgot her lunch in grade six, I almost drove it to school. Almost. But I didn’t. And guess what? She never forgot it again. Well… rarely. Curtis: Letting small struggles happen is like letting go of the bike. Not because you don’t care — but because you do. Segment 4: Practical Ways to Teach Accountability Curtis: Alright, let’s get practical. 1. Get clear on expectations Kids don’t magically know what “responsible” means. Spell it out: Homework before screens Clean up your stuff Speak respectfully RJ: When my kids were young, I assumed they knew what “clean your room” meant. They did not. Their version was “move everything into one giant pile.” 2. Ask more, tell less Instead of: “Why didn’t you do this?” Try: “What do you think happened there?” RJ: That question saved my sanity. It turns a fight into a conversation. 3. Let small mistakes happen Forgot lunch? Didn’t study? Left something behind? Let it play out. Curtis: Then later, ask: “What would you do differently next time?” RJ: And resist the urge to say, “See? I told you.” Even though… You did. Segment 5: Handling Attitude and Pushback Curtis: Let’s talk about the attitude. Because 11-year-olds come with a starter pack of eye rolls. RJ: Amanda could roll her eyes so hard she could see her own brain. Curtis: When that happens, separate the feeling from the behaviour. Try: “I get that you’re frustrated — but we still speak respectfully.” RJ: You’re not shutting down the emotion. You’re just holding the boundary. Curtis: And consistency matters. If the rules change every day, kids will test them every day. Segment 6: Building Long-Term Confidence Curtis: Here’s the big picture: Teaching accountability builds confidence. RJ: Because they learn, “I can handle things — even when I mess up.” Curtis: Confidence doesn’t come from perfection. It comes from recovery. RJ: And natural consequences teach recovery better than any lecture ever could. Segment 7: Preparing for the Teen Years Curtis: Everything you’re doing now is training for the teenage years. RJ: And trust me — you want that foundation. Teen years come with bigger decisions and bigger freedoms. Curtis: If accountability is already part of the family culture, those years get way smoother. RJ: You’re not controlling them — you’re guiding them. And that’s the sweet spot. 🎧 [SOFT MUSIC FADES BACK IN] Curtis: So if you take one thing from today, let it be this: You don’t have to control every outcome to raise a responsible kid. Sometimes the best thing you can do is step back and let life teach the lesson. RJ: You’re there to support, not to rescue every time. And trust me — it pays off. Curtis: Thanks for hanging out with us today. I’m Curtis… RJ: And I’m RJ — proud dad of Josh and Amanda, who both survived natural consequences and turned out pretty great. Curtis: We’ll catch you in the next episode.