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#171353 - 01/14/09 11:42 PM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: yonuh]
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Member
Registered: 09/26/04
Posts: 3910
Loc: Alabama
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Kate, it's always good to hear from you. I hope you don't mind me asking but how is your other son doing?
_________________________
chick ~ Here is the test to find whether your mission on Earth is finished: if you're alive, it isn't ~ ~ Prayer is the most we can do for another human being ~
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#171360 - 01/15/09 01:32 AM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: katebcca]
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Registered: 11/19/08
Posts: 1758
Loc: American living in Germany
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Kate, just keep loving them and showing them that, as you allready do. The love that lets go, wins in the end. You'll see. They will be back. Try not to let them see your pain. Be the strong stable mother that they will need. And take this time out as a vacation, and spoil yourself for a change.
_________________________
As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live. Goethe
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#171376 - 01/15/09 08:12 AM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: Edelweiss3]
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Registered: 08/12/08
Posts: 676
Loc: Wauconda, IL
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Hi Kate
Oh sweetie, I know how hard it is to have your kids come to you and want to move away. I had a hard time when my son said, at 16.5, that he wanted to move in with his dad (who lived in Pennsylvania at the time, we were in Indiana). I don't know how I would handle it with multiple children!
I felt betrayed. Pissed off. Angry. Sad. The works. We had always had a pretty decent relationship or so I thought and this felt like a blow that was unfair as it gets.
I ranted. Raged. Cried. Called my girlfriends and told them what an ungrateful SOB he was. All of it!
The day he left I sat on the floor and cried and cried and cried.
As time went on, I found myself looking at life in new ways. It was actually fun to have him be so far away, knowing (so I thought) that his dad was taking care of things and I got to be the one with the fun stuff for a change. Although his dad is a good guy in many ways, he is aloof and prone to using money to take care of things, not his time or to focus on the daily tasks we women do so much.
At one point, I actually felt guilty because I was enjoying him being gone. OMG, how could I do that? What kind of mom was I? Grin.
The true gift of the situation was when I realized I got to look at what I needed, without worrying about where he was, what he needed, what I should be teaching, etc.
And that process brought me to learning how to prioritize, follow my spiritual path, take courses that supported my growth. And, in the end, I believe I am actually a better mother to my grown son. Because grown he is and he gets to walk the path that was meant for him.
Because of my training and explorations into myself, I have been able to guide him in a very different way than would ever have been possible without him leaving. I stopped judging myself by how much I did for him, was for him, "gave up" for him. Which actually took a huge load off his shoulders!
Another great side effect? The mess in the house was mine! I could no longer groan and moan about what he hadn't picked up, the chores he hadn't done, or what an ungrateful poophead he was. Which also sucked eggs since I had only myself to point to when the dustbunnies started having races around my townhouse and I had to step out of the way so they could have their fun!
Set the rules you need to for the son who is staying with you. Coddle yourself. Give yourself the gift of knowing you, as an individual. Because you see, sweet one, you are one amazing gift to the world. And it is your time to shine.
_________________________
Love and light, hugs and blessings MamaRed (Jerilynne) www.mamaredspeaks.com www.onemillionacts.comComing Summer 2009 "Kick-Butt Kindness: 52 No Cost Ways to Ripple Kindness 'Round the World" Let's create Kick-Butt-and-Take-Names Lives!
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#171590 - 01/16/09 03:05 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 really hope Kate, that your daughter will see the light and will come back to spend time with you. It sounds more zooish at her dad's place, with less space to be herself as she grows into adulthood. She will want that fantasy supportive mother who understands her needs,...that she left behind..:D
Will she have space and time to pursue her artistic tendencies? Very important perhaps right now...during major change she is choosing to make in her life ..if she gets more peace in her new alternate space???
Hope you find a good home to settle in.
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#171660 - 01/17/09 01:42 AM
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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Your daughter has a great deal of potential, Kate. I hope she visits you frequently.
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#171681 - 01/17/09 08:02 AM
Re: help teen wants to move out
[Re: orchid]
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Founder
Registered: 07/09/08
Posts: 23647
Loc: Maryland
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Kate, I think she told you exactly why she's moving. She wants to try this because she THINKS it will be like having her own place. But we know better. Your husband has no idea what he's in for, having two teens live with him. He's got to feed them, love around them, listen to them, drive them, get out of the bathroom for them, etc. I say let her go and give it a try. I don't think it will last long. I'm glad it's during the school year because that should give her more structure than if it was summer with loads of free time.
All you can do is love and encourage her, stand back, and listen when she calls.
Yoga sounds fantastic. I can feel my sholders dropping, jsut thinking about it. I was going to begin yoga last week, but ended up not going. I really can't kneel and I don't want to be the one in the class who sits on a chair for certain stretches.
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