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#176541 - 03/07/09 06:17 PM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: katebcca]
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Registered: 01/21/07
Posts: 3675
Loc: British Columbia, Canada
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My thoughts are that I want to talk to her about this. I feel that even if she does stay at her Dad's that she should spend some time at my home. Many divorced parents share custody, in my current order I am the primary care giver but the ex has shared custody with me. Up until a month ago he never had the kids for any length of time, never had them weekends, or in the summer. I have always had them. I still want to be in her life but while she is at her Dad's I rarely see her
I am responding to this point alone, on daughter's development and well-being plus the daughter-mother relationship:
You need to have a friendly dialogue with daughter. It is not clear at this time and probably not to your daughter(?) what she wants in terms of her primary residence --yours or your ex's house. Or if it should be 50% time at your place.
I suspect your daughter's gut feeling that she knows in her heart, to live with you means she must follow-through to become accountable for what she does/does not do (school, etc.) but she gets to live in a more sane environment with her mom who is also a very important, positive adult female mentor to her development. The latter alone is a powerful reason why I hope your daughter will live with you at least part-time. She needs to find herself...in a sane, supportive environment.
Will your ex provide her all the food and money for her to buy her own clothing, necessities if she does not work?
This is tough, because in dialogue with your daughter, you do not want to be perceived as someone in some sort of tussle with ex, where daughter feels like a pawn in a power struggle between 2 parents.
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#176585 - 03/08/09 09:03 PM
Reunion! Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: Dancing Dolphin]
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Registered: 01/21/07
Posts: 3675
Loc: British Columbia, Canada
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I voluntarily changed the subject line abit..because Kate this is a wonderful change for you and your daughter to be together again under 1 roof. So happy for you!!
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#180186 - 04/14/09 06:16 PM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: katebcca]
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Registered: 01/21/07
Posts: 3675
Loc: British Columbia, Canada
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I'm sorry to hear about this latest development, Kate. It must be truly difficult to see your daughter allow herself to get caught into another complicated situation that will not help her, given her age.
And her need to finish /graduate from high school. It chills me when some (lost) young people in North America do not understand the value of their basic education and how much it can affect their future.
It is deeply troubling that her father hasn't even met the guy at all.
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#180396 - 04/17/09 07:18 AM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: orchid]
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Registered: 11/19/08
Posts: 1758
Loc: American living in Germany
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Kate, sounds like Canada is getting the same low morals as here in Europe. Teenagers stay overnight at their boyfriend’s or girlfriend’s house all the time. I was shocked, but like everything else…even that you can get used to. Our son’s did overnights when they were 18 and their girlfriend’s were just 16.
Please don’t misunderstand me, I don’t condone it. But the arguments the parents have here is, they rather know where their child is then having them take off somewhere secretly.
When I think back, no way would I have wanted to sleep with a boyfriend under my parent’s roof. In this case, your daughter is visiting her boyfriend’s apartment. Geez..they have coed dorms now. And those kids are just a year older.
I say don’t dwell on that issue to much. Make sure your daughter takes birth control pills, and just concentrate on her schooling. That is what really is important.
_________________________
As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live. Goethe
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#180484 - 04/18/09 08:38 PM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: katebcca]
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Registered: 01/21/07
Posts: 3675
Loc: British Columbia, Canada
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If she should still hang out with this guy for a long time, for your own awareness if your daughter is agreeable, to encourage her to bring him to say hi or have a coffee/picnic/snack in park somewhere for all 3 of you. Probably better if your younger son wasn't around at such meeting so you don't have to worry much.
When my partner had problems with his son, who dropped out of high school temporarily within the last 6 months before he was about to finish Gr. 12, he and his ex sent out 1 common message individually to him: If you won't go to school, get a job. Oh yea, he became a father at age 21 with a girlfriend, who is now an ex. To make a long story short, he shares joint custody of a little son, with ex-girlfriend. He is happily married to different highly motivated, organized young woman and he is a chef who has been reviewed by his local city. He has been building his skills through some college courses, reading cookbooks and experimenting. Yes, whenever he sees his father (my partner), we are treated to gourmet real cheffy meals.
Which he did get a job for 1.5 yrs., then return to school to finish, etc. The only saving grace that probably prevented him from falling further into an abyss, is he did /still does have a great set of good friends long-term that didn't do much or any drugs, limited drinking, etc.
It is a more complex journey to come back to true core self. Keep your belief in your daughter and you are telling her that. Has she ever been given a problem to solve that will capitalize on her artistic skill? I am asked as the family member to do hand calligraphy off-the-cuff, for certain family celebrations.
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