I agree with the folks who say this is a perfect opportunity to teach that young man how to be calm and treat other living things with respect.
I have worked with a lot of kids through scouting and once I inherited a den of ADHD, ADD boys no one else wanted to lead and then my own kid.
I experience taught me that even the rowdiest of boys could be calm with some finess.
I tried to let them run around before moving to something they needed to be careful with - to get out the energy.
We had rules and consequences - not anything major but they came up with the rules and actually thier consequences were more severe then we actually used but I would suggest you sit with your son and make a poster about rules around your birds. And talk about what happens if he breaks his own rules. - Shift it to his responsibility and let him take a little ownership and stewardship. 7 year boys are not babies and actually quite able to start to grasp the rule consequence - good behavior - reward system. In cubbies they can earn the right to use a pocket knife at 7 - not that I would recommend that here!
The totem chip for knife use is a good example - they had to carry it like a license - They had 4 chances to not use the knife in a responsible way and any adult seeing misuse would tear off a corner of the totem chip - once all 4 corners gone - so were the privilages that allowed them to use the pocket knife and they had to start over and relearn the rules and demonstrate they were competent before earning it again.
Don't buy into the "only child" "so little" routine. I know this is your son but he is capable in learning to be respectful of the birds and to be a good shepherd to them. Help him be a good shepherd and have him take part in how he learns to keep them.
just a humble opinion from an old scout bear!
Caroline Jax FL
I have worked with a lot of kids through scouting and once I inherited a den of ADHD, ADD boys no one else wanted to lead and then my own kid.
I experience taught me that even the rowdiest of boys could be calm with some finess.
I tried to let them run around before moving to something they needed to be careful with - to get out the energy.
We had rules and consequences - not anything major but they came up with the rules and actually thier consequences were more severe then we actually used but I would suggest you sit with your son and make a poster about rules around your birds. And talk about what happens if he breaks his own rules. - Shift it to his responsibility and let him take a little ownership and stewardship. 7 year boys are not babies and actually quite able to start to grasp the rule consequence - good behavior - reward system. In cubbies they can earn the right to use a pocket knife at 7 - not that I would recommend that here!
The totem chip for knife use is a good example - they had to carry it like a license - They had 4 chances to not use the knife in a responsible way and any adult seeing misuse would tear off a corner of the totem chip - once all 4 corners gone - so were the privilages that allowed them to use the pocket knife and they had to start over and relearn the rules and demonstrate they were competent before earning it again.
Don't buy into the "only child" "so little" routine. I know this is your son but he is capable in learning to be respectful of the birds and to be a good shepherd to them. Help him be a good shepherd and have him take part in how he learns to keep them.
just a humble opinion from an old scout bear!
Caroline Jax FL
