Teen Drivers or What to Expect When Your Teenage Son Gets His Learner’s Permit

No one prepared me for teenage drivers. I currently have one child with a learner’s permit and another scheduled to get his in a few weeks. Stinky diapers, crayons on the wall, temper tantrums, and snotty noses are nothing compared to sitting in the passenger seat while you child is learning to drive. I think the authors of “What to Expect When You’re Expecting” need to title their next book, “What to Expect When Your Teenage Son Gets His Learner’s Permit.”

I’ve learned a lot over the last year and a half about teenage drivers, so I though I should share this information, so that you, unlike me, will be prepared when your first born wants to drive.

Research the Laws of Your State

Each state requires something different to get a learner’s permit/ driver’s license. Shockingly, some states have even changed the laws since we got our permits! 🙂 Do not start researching these laws when your child turns fifteen, start when they are fourteen, because in some states you can get your permit on your fifteenth birthday.

I’m not suggesting your child get their permit at fifteen, but it is better to know to requirements before driving is even an option for your child.

Decide When Your Child is Ready to Get Their Permit

Just because your child can get their permit doesn’t mean they are ready. Sit down with your child and talk about what you expect from them as a driver. Let them know if you have no intentions of allowing them to get their permit immediately. Discuss with them when you think they will be ready to take the learner’s test.

Set Ground Rules Before They Have a Permit

Will your child be allowed to drive friends, talk on the phone, or eat while driving? This might depend on the laws of your state, but make sure your child knows what you allow before they get behind the wheel. Will they lose driving privileges due to poor grades? Will they be allowed to drive with girlfriends/ boyfriends? Setting boundaries and rules before they start to drive is easier than changing them down the road.

Make Sure You Have Time Available to Teach Them to Drive

Your kids aren’t going to learn how to drive on their own. They need an adult helping them make the right decisions. Before they get their permit make sure you have the time to take them out driving. I’ve known families whose children have had to renew their child’s learner’s permit because they didn’t get enough driving experience to take the test before it expired.

Kids need a lot of experience behind the wheel in different situations. Many states now require a certain number of hours to get a license, but even if your state does not, make sure they practice driving in the rain, at night, during rush hour, or in difficult conditions. You want to make sure they are comfortable in any situation before they drive without you.

Talk to Your Insurance Company

Many companies allow your teenage driver to be added to the policy for free if they have a learner’s permit, but you’ll want to let them know you have an additional driver. You might also want to review your coverage and consider lowering your deductible depending on your child’s natural ability to drive. 🙂

Budget for Additional Gas

For my daughter driving did not come naturally. When she first got her permit we had to drive on Saturday mornings in an empty office park until she was confident enough to drive on the road with other cars. It took a few months before she was able to drive without making special driving outings. Make sure you budget for the extra gas when your child is starting out, especially with the high price of gas.

Teach Them How to Fill ‘er Up

Teach your child how to fill the car with gas before they are driving alone. Discuss what type of gas you put in the car and familiarize them with pay at the pump gas pumps. This is also a good time to talk about who is going to pay for gas when they get their license.

Get a Tune Up

Make sure the car your child drives is in good working condition. You’ll probably want to make sure the brakes, power steering, and signals are working properly before an unexperienced driver gets behind the wheel. In many states your child cannot pass the driver’s test in a car that needs significant repairs.

Consider signing up for a roadside assistance program (Allstate has a plan where you only pay when you need it) for peace of mind when your child starts driving alone.

Get on the Same Page With Your Spouse

You say stop, he says go. You say slow down, he says speed up. Talk to your spouse about how you are going to teach your child to drive. If the child is hearing one thing when they drive with mom and another when they drive with dad they will be confused and less confident on the road. Mixed messages can cause your child to second guess their decisions while behind the wheel.

Relax

For many parents watching the child who set the front yard on fire with a magnifying glass get behind the wheel of the family car can be a scary thing. But a tense parent is a tense driver. You want your child to feel comfortable behind the wheel so remember to relax and gently guide them as they drive. Some kids don’t need a lot of help, but those who do need a parent who isn’t tearing off the door handle due to stress.

Try to avoid grabbing the steering wheel, stomping your foot on the floor (as if to brake), and gripping the dashboard with your hands while your child drives. Although my parents did all these things when I learned to drive and I turned out okay, it might be better to use a hands off approach.

 

Coupons for Troops

I’ve been running the Coupons for Troops program for over three years and we’ve matched up over one hundred overseas military families with stateside families willing to donate coupons.

The program currently has overseas military families waiting to receive coupons. If you are interested in donating (or receiving) coupons please read the FAQ page before emailing me any questions about donating or receiving.

If you are interested in participating in the program there are links on the FAQ page to sign up.

Thanks for supporting our troops with coupons!

Manatee

We live on an island. At least they call it an island. Anyway, there is water everywhere in our neighborhood and we live a short walk from a large lake. Tonight we headed out to the dock and were pleasantly surprised by this guy.

Not only was this manatee swimming within arms reach, he brought about 15 of his manatee friends with him. I was so upset with myself that I didn’t bring my camera with me (like I always do). I did catch this short video with my phone.

Ignore my shhh’ing the kids. For some reason I thought they would swim away with the noise, but they didn’t. They swam closer. Go figure….

Using Traditions to Build the Faith in Our Children

Faith is a big part of my life. It defines me and impacts almost every decision I make. Over the next few months I and a few other bloggers will be discussing how our faith impacts our children. This month we are discussing using traditions to build the faith of our children.

Since we are talking about faith I better be honest, I stink at faith based traditions. I really do! In my mind I have grand plans about creating an advent calendar from felt, or taking food to the homeless on Thanksgiving, or creating special gifts on birthdays or special occasions that emphasize our faith. But I don’t, life usually gets in the way and we are opening six of the Playmobil Advent Calendar boxes on Christmas Eve!

When I realized that our first post was about traditions and after wracking my brain for several days and not coming up with ANYTHING I started to panic. In fact I put off writing the post because I couldn’t think of anything to say. But as I sat down, last minute to write, something popped into my head.

Just because I’m not great at faith based traditions doesn’t mean our family traditions don’t build our children’s faith. When I read the topic for this post I kept thinking that the traditions needed to be about our faith, but the more I thought about it the more I realized that traditions in general are good for families and can be used to build faith, even if they have nothing to do with religion.

My faith is built on a relationship with Jesus, so building a relationship with my children teaches them about relationships. Even though I fail my children repeatedly, unlike Jesus, it is my hope that through my relationship with them, they get a glimpse of what a relationship with Jesus is all about.

So, where do traditions fit in to all of this? Our family uses traditions to build relationships and experiences with our kids. For years we stayed at the same hotel on the drive home from Florida. We cut down a Christmas tree every year on Thanksgiving weekend. We eat pizza on Fridays and we open a gift on Christmas Eve. If you are sick and go to the doctor you get an ice cream on the way home. My children look forward to these traditions and are disappointed when we have to skip one.

These traditions help strengthen the bond between my husband and I and our children. It is one more thing in common we have with each other, one more story we have to share, one more memory to cherish. And it is through my relationship with my children that I have the opportunity to share my faith with them. If I had no foundation my words would fall on deaf ears.

I am thankful and blessed that I have two teenagers who still want to sit on my bed and talk at 11:30 pm. I’m thankful I have little children who ask questions about our faith on a daily basis. These things wouldn’t be possible if we didn’t make relationships with our children a priority. Creating traditions with your children is just one way to strengthen family bonds. They don’t have to be faith based to build faith. If your faith is central to your family then traditions that might seem unrelated to your faith actually build it by drawing your family closer together.

Read what these awesome moms have to say about using traditions to build the faith of their children.

Commissary Loyalty Card

My Shopper's CardsHave you heard the latest commissary coupon news? Amy from Spouse Buzz recently posted about the new Commissary Loyalty Card program which should be launched later this year. I’m so excited the commissary is finally catching up with what other stores have been doing for years!

Unfortunately you will not be able to stack coupons with the card, but since the commissary hasn’t allowed this in the past I’m not surprised.

From the commissary website:

Loyalty cards will be issued in-store and patrons will be required to register their loyalty card on M-Dot Network’s specified coupon Web site, accessible through DeCA’s Web site.  This new and exciting program will provide digital manufacturer coupons to commissary patrons.  Once the card is registered, patrons will select the coupons they wish to instantly load onto their loyalty card.  At checkout, the commissary patrons will swipe their loyalty card to redeem coupons.  Coupons will be electronically matched against purchases and automatically deducted from the total bill.  This program relieves our patrons from having to clip, organize, and save paper coupons, as well as, remembering to bring their paper coupons with them to the commissary.  Paper coupons will still be accepted by the commissary and current coupon policies will remain in effect.

I can’t wait to see what types of coupons will be offered with this loyalty card. I hoping the digital coupons will be in addition to those we can clip and print, but so far the commissary isn’t sharing too many details. Amy has written a great summary of the program if you want to learn more and remember to familiarize yourself with the commissary coupon policy before you shop!

photo credit: LVCHEN