T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1281.1 | | QUIVER::STEFANI | Stay within the lines, stay within the lines | Mon Jul 06 1992 19:33 | 17 |
| re: .0
Until the hearing, there doesn't seem like much that can be done. If
your niece feels so strongly about staying away from her mother that
she got a restraining order against her, I would leave it at that. The
one more likely to need to come back is the niece. Obviously it's
easier to say than do and I'm sure your sister loves her daughter, but
letting her go and fend for herself is probably the most growing up
she'll (the daughter) do.
By the way, I stayed with a family where both parents objected to the boy
that their 16 yr. daughter was dating. After forbiding her to see him,
her losing phone privileges, being grounded, and finally having the
police called to talk to the boy, she seems to have found other
interests.
- Larry
|
1281.2 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Mon Jul 06 1992 23:59 | 5 |
| re.0
You neice sounds like a real brat, myself I'd let her stay where she's
at and change the locks.
-j
|
1281.3 | the hard way | WFOV11::LEWIS_B | | Tue Jul 07 1992 03:16 | 2 |
| Looks like a situation where the niece will have to learn the hard way.
Robert.
|
1281.4 | | XCUSME::QUAYLE | i.e. Ann | Tue Jul 07 1992 10:32 | 18 |
| I sure hope whoever sent the $700.00 stopped payment on the check...
Sounds like the niece couldn't just grow up and move on, but needed to
make the break fast and furious (perhaps to force herself, perhaps to
mark the end of childhood - painful no matter why).
There may have been nothing at all her mother could have done
differently that would have resulted in a more peaceful passage.
(Free parlor psychiatry, worth the price.)
I think your sister should see a lawyer about the restraining order
hearing and about the money. I also think that changing the locks
might be a good idea. If the daughter has stolen the money, she may
decide to make off with other things.
Thoughts and prayers with you and your family,
aq
|
1281.5 | | MAGEE::SKOWRONEK | | Tue Jul 07 1992 11:03 | 38 |
|
First of all, I think your sister was *wrong* in trying to make her
daughter break up with her boyfriend. The only thing she did was send
her deeper into his arms. The worst thing a parent can do is say "You
cannot go out with him/her", "You can't hang around with him/her", etc.
I am a parent myself, but I was also a teenager once myself, and I was
a rebel in all respects of the word. If my mother said "You can't" or
"I told you not to", then I would do whatever it was. It is all just
part of growing up --- You may be 17, but in your eyes, you are an
adult, even if the adults don't think so.
Now, I was not a spoiled brat, and I was pretty respectful to my mother
(everything "bad" I did was behind her back) and I was a very good
student --- I was also very mature for my age and my mother did not
want to admit that. The only advice I can give is for your sister to
just let go of her daughter -- she does not want to be controlled. One
of the worst things a parent can tell a daughter is "I don't like your
boyfriend, and I don't want you to see him" -- you have to let the
child figure that out for herself (or himself). It is all a part of
growing up. It is not fun for a parent to see their child get hurt,
but by trying to control the teenager, then you make things worse.
Just watch "Roseanne", they have a story line which follows this
scenario very well. Finally the parents just gave in, and after that,
the daughters eyes started opening up.
Sorry for rambling, but your neice is old enough to make her own
decisions, and if this is what she wants, then your sister should let
her do it --- It won't be easy for your sister or your neice, but some
very valuable lessons on life will be learned and that is the only way
for growing. The only suggestion I think your sister should make to
her daughter is that she get on some kind of birth control -- and make
sure she does not demand this, just have her suggest it, and hopefully
your neice will take the advice. I think all she wants is to be
treated like an adult. She needs to be shown some respect for her
feelings and decisions also.
Good Luck
|
1281.6 | | QUIVER::STEFANI | Stay within the lines, stay within the lines | Tue Jul 07 1992 12:54 | 20 |
| re: .5
By the same token, silence == approval. If the mother had strong
feelings about why her daughter shouldn't be going out with her
boyfriend, she has the obligation (as a parent) to convey those
feelings. I agree that the "Well, you can't see him because I said
so" approach shouldn't be used on a 17-yr. old (and unlikely to
be much effective), but not saying something because of fear that
she'll run off with the guy is not the right approach either, IMHO.
Kids rebel, but they need to know that there are certain rules that
come along with living at home. For whatever reasons (and it's not so
clear in .0 why the niece left and got a court order) the daughter felt
that she was better off with running away. I'm not sure, but it's
possible that she may not have the right at 17 years of age to live
without a legal guardian, so I'm curious to see what .0 writes after
the hearing.
- Larry
|
1281.7 | Parenting - not for sissies | XCUSME::QUAYLE | i.e. Ann | Tue Jul 07 1992 15:55 | 22 |
| Back again, already.
When my oldest daughter was engaged at 18, I felt it was a prime mistake
for many reasons. My advice to her: never marry someone with whom you're
not even enjoying the courtship. Other than that, we welcomed him to our
home and included him in all the family celebrations, tried to love him
but couldn't do much more than put up with him. He found it nearly
impossible to do even that much with us. We figured that - if worst
came to worst :) - he would be our relative and the father of some
beloved folks, so we kept trying over the next year and a half.
Imagine my relief when she dropped by one day and ever so
casually said, "I told you I broke up with noname, didn't I?"
She (25) and my son (23) have both married, and are both expecting!
(Well, you know what I mean)
My youngest is now enthusiastically talking marriage (she's 17, the
prospective husband is 16). :( Still, he's a great guy, and I try to
make him welcome while encouraging them to allow time to watch their
feelings develop.
|
1281.8 | she's a spoiked brat... | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Tue Jul 07 1992 16:39 | 39 |
| Your niece is a rebel that shows no respect for her folks and she'll
get no respect with her behavior...
I don't agree with some replies who said "don't say no" to a teen
ager... I DO say no to ANY of my kids when needed and they DO LISTEN to
me. Of course when I say no I do have a very VALID reason for saying
no and they know it. I have three, 26, 24 and 18... and NEVER had any
problem with ANY ONE OF THEM. My daughter (24 years old) is getting
married to a boy I DID NOT KNOW till she brought him over to meet us
and ask for her han... I asked her if he WAS A GOOD BOY and she said
"don't worry Mom, he is a GOOD boy, trust me" and of course I did.
I met him, I liked him, and one month after the engagement I flew over
to another country to meet his family. I liked his family as much as I
already like him! Both my daughter and her boyfriend have our agreement
and blessings, we are very happy for them and they will get married this
coming November.
If I had found SOMETHING I did not like... I would immediately tell my
daughter and believe me, she would have never ignored my remarks! she knows
I mean well and want the best for her. I always treat her well and she
does same!
As long as your niece lives at her parents' house she has to abide by
their rules, that restraining order against her parents means that she
is not at all mature, is full of resentment... and lost. SHE is the one who
will need help... not her mother! she will find out that the boy is not
what she needs... only when it is too late, when her life is torn or
worst, if a baby is on its way... and there is no secure house or
future for him/her. I fail to understand why some teens are so dumb before
they grow-up, they make life SO HARD for themselves and those around them!
and life itself is not hard... WE make it that way.
Your niece needs discipline and guidelines, that's all! if she accepts
them fine, if not... time to be out and accept HER own... lets see how
well prepared is she for that, if she thinks she is mature, she has to
prove it.
Lots of luck, Ana
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1281.10 | She'll learn | PSYLO::FANTOZZI | Ride'm Cowgirl! | Wed Jul 08 1992 14:46 | 15 |
|
And what if her mistake ends up causing her some physical harm? My
mother was one who always spoke her mind, and still does to this day.
She would voice her feelings and most of the time it was feelings I had
but just didn't see.
It sounds like this young girl has not respect for her family members
either by allowing this guy to cause problems within the family.
She will soon learn that the most important people in your life is your
family. When all else has gone, they will still be the ones there
supporting her.
Mary
|
1281.11 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Winds of Change | Thu Jul 09 1992 00:01 | 19 |
| Issuing edicts to teenagers is useless. What I hear is that the mother
didn't approve/like the boyfriend. Fine, she has that right. The
mother also has the right to set limits and boundries in her home. If
someone is in my home and is being rude and disrespectful to me I try
to set a boundry and state that that is unacceptable behavior in my
home. If it's not respected then I ask the offender to leave and not
come back until they can treat me with respect.
I feel the mother was out of line telling her daughter she couldn't see
this boy. To me this is trying to control. What the mother *should*
(and I really dislike using that word) have done is set the boundry and
limit on behavior in her home and then banned the boyfriend from her
home when it wasn't respected.
I also wonder if there is something else going on. A daughter doesn't
go get a restraining order over something like this. I wonder if there
is more to this than the basenoter realizes.
Karen
|
1281.12 | She is not alone | AIMHI::MACMILLAN | | Thu Jul 09 1992 19:07 | 66 |
| I too have an 18 yr. old daughter and I am also going through similar
problems. I wish I had an easy answer but alas, I don't, otherwise, I
would have used it myself. My daughter just graduated from high school
(barely) and he boyfriend has also graduated (he is 19). Neither one of
them has a job, nor does she look very hard . She started dating this
boy over a year ago. everything was fine in the begining but that did
not last long. We welcomed him imto our house, fed him supper more
often than not, took him on trips with us and generally treated him
like one of the family (or tried to) . My daughter started failing in
school ( I swear, I was at the school more than she was) She broke
all sorts of house rules etc. She was more or less grounded off and on
for over a yr. I did not forbid her from seeing this boy, but I sure
made my feelings known, I am also not one to keep my feelings to
myself. I told her that he was no good, lazy , and I did not feel that
they were a healthy couple together. (negative, negative). He has
since then alledgely broken into two homes , his own mother had to get a
restraing order on him. I have barred him from my house or even
anywhere near my property.
My daughter and I fight constantly over this boy. I have asked her to
move out, the tension is unreal. She told me that she has nowhere to
go. I told her to go live with that boy but she doesn't want to.
Society, states that she is an adult, but she is far from being an
adult. she is 18 and going on 12. She has graduated from school with
no education nor any skills. My heart breaks, I try to look back and
figure out how My husband and I raised her with no self confidence in
herself to tell this jerk to get lost. She is still seeing him, as I
stated, I cannot forbid her to not see him but I do try and make it
hard. She lies all the time now and I cannot honestly trust her which
is a sad thing to say. ( this bothers me the most, trust is such a
sacred thing)
I also know that he came through our basement window to see her one
night. I have just barred up the window and put a bolt on all the doors.
We do go to a counselor, sometimes all three of us, sometimes just our
daughter.
I know if she does stay with him, he will hurt her, physically as I
believe he has already hurt her mentally. I have no way to fight but
the hate that seeths up inside because of what is going on is
incredable. We are trying to do our best for now. I wish she was able
to move out though as I believe that would be the best for all
concerned, my husband does not want us just to kick her out on the
street, I guess the bottom line is that we love her and by her staying
at home, there is always some hope.
My daughter has made some bad choices in her life but this one is the
worst one yet. I can only hope that she grows up soon and realizes
that she has just threw away the best year of her life. We all try to
do the best for our children but we cannot live their lives for them.
Hopefully, your niece will grow up as I hope my daughter does. Tell your
sister that she is not alone out there, their is something about a
mother daughter relationship. I also know that it doesn't make it any
easier, as they all know how to push the right buttons and perhaps,
therein lies the key.
My daughter is starting a job next week, I can only hope that this
opens a new door to her life, so she can slam the other door shut.
I will have to wait and see.
Good luck to your sister
|
1281.13 | | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Fri Jul 10 1992 10:17 | 42 |
|
I read through these notes and I just dont know what to say.
It's just such a tradgedy that the social structure we live in does
not _provide_ what these kids need, to avoid the dripping_with_
codependancy_deadbeat_boyfriend_syndrome.
I dont want to sound like I'm on a high horse here, because
I didnt get it either. My mother drilled into me the concept of
"get a college education and you'll have the world by the tail!"
So I got a college education and it was "Well, here I am world!"
In my thrust into real life I *hardly* had the world by the tail.
Emotionally, I wasnt "suited" to have anything more than to get
right into the dripping_with_codependancy_deadbeat_girlfriend_syndrome.
Yep.
It's not all the parent's fault, either. Some of it could be
taken on in the education system - courses designed to lead a young
person toward being able to make an emotionally health decision
for themselves. I mean, "home economics and wood shop" just aren't
making it for young people in these terms.
I think the ability to recognize the dynamic of codependancy
and know how to avoid it should be, by now, *common* knowledge that
we teach to teen age children in public school systems. It should
be something that everyone gets a basic working understanding of,
like "washing your hands" or "exercize" or "sex education", as part
of the standard curriculum.
#&%$ "wood shop"! - teach the children something that will help
them avoid the utter tradgedys we're reading about in this string.
It is *not* necessary for things to have to get "bad enough"; thrown
out of the house or arrested, for a young man or young woman to
come into this kind of knowledge via some "blessing in disguise"
such as that.
They could learn it up front, so at least they could make
their choices via some understanding - or make it despite their
understanding.
Joe
|
1281.14 | my daughter | ASDG::CALL | | Fri Jul 10 1992 15:20 | 27 |
| I went through this with my daughter when she was sixteen. We fought ALOT
about it in the beginning. I wanted her to finish school. I had a car
for her. I told her I would NOT support the route she was taking. I
wanted her to do a 360 degree turn. She kept running away from home.
She got pregnant. I filed emancipation papers. She moved in with David
and they had a little girl. I would have to say that having the baby
restricted far more than I ever could. She has grown up soooo much and
so fast. David is still with her. I have to give him credit. He has
stuck by her through thick and thin. They are finally talking marriage.
I hope so for she is going to have another one soon.
I don't know why they want to make their lives so difficult for
themselves. It's hard as a parent not to try to sheild them from life.
Yes some people have to learn the hard way. It's hard to let them make
their own choices when you would like so much more for them.
I have no doubt that she will do ok in life. She is a very smart and
capable young woman.
We are good friends now (yes we still have our moments).
The only advice I could give to your sister is to look up a tough love
chapter and maybe attend some of their meetings.
|
1281.15 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 13 1992 09:49 | 14 |
| I met a man like this once. I cannot go into details. But...I can
say that he went thru this stage, found a good loving woman. And she
gave him reason to get an honest job, and become a good father, and
became an outstanding person in his community.
She was very young woman, very attractive, and had a good head on her
shoulders for what needed to be done. And would say to him 'do it or
else'. And He would rise to what ever the task was needed. Including
getting his GED, now owns his own construction business, and has a
lovely home, and a couple of kids.
He went thru this deadbeat stage to the point of living in a rooming
house, no job, no support, was about to get evicted from there when
he met this woman. Life has its strange twist.
|
1281.16 | Reply from anonymous author of base note | QUARK::MODERATOR | | Mon Jul 13 1992 13:15 | 77 |
| RE: .4
>>I sure hope whoever sent the $700.00 stopped payment on the check...
Unfortunately, the check has to be made out to my niece, but it is owed
to my sister.
RE: .5
>>First of all, I think your sister was *wrong* in trying to make her
>>daughter break up with her boyfriend.
I never said that my sister tried to make her daughter break up with her
boyfriend. I said that they had many discussions about this guy and what he
has done to the family. He told my sister that my nephew had been seen smoking
pot at high school. When confronting other people who know my nephew (both his
friends and my niece's friends) it has been denyed. Besides, he has severe
asthma (he's almost died twice) and KNOWS that it could kill him!
She never told my niece that she couldn't go out with this boy. She's 18 years
old and is legally considered an adult. My sister DID however voice her
opinions about this boy and said that she doesn'tlike him what so ever!
RE: .9
>>Your sister went too far when she demanded that your niece not see this
>>guy she obviously feels very strongly about. I can see why the boy is
>>not nice to the family, they haven't even given him a chance. He's
>>only 17! In my book 17 yr. old kids are aloowed to act like kids
>>because that's what they are!
As I said, I never said that my sister DEMANDED that my niece not see this guy.
Just that he would no longer be allowed into the house because of the problems
he's caused in the house. He may be 17 years old, but that gives him no right
to cause trouble with everyone in the house. He has been given PLENTY of
chance to proove himself to be a nice guy. My niece has been seeing him for
the past four months and he's been welcomed into my sister's home for that
entire time. That is until he started this trouble. He's also KNOWN in the
town to be a drug dealer.
.9>>but she cut off her nose to spite her face when
.9>>she told her she could come and go as she pleased. I can't belive it
.9>>was a big suprise that she stayed out all night! I would've done the
.9>>same thing!
I don't believe that she "cut off her nose to spite her face". My niece is 18
years old. Again, legally considered an adult. If you will re-read my note,
my sister was NOT surprised that my niece stayed out all night! The issue that
she was surprised at was the restraining order that was apparently for no
reason.
RE: .12 + .14
Thank you for your story. It helps to know that someone knows how you feel.
And now an update. I got a phone call from my niece last night. She is
staying at a friend's house and is working on getting her own apartment.
I asked her what happened at her house that night. She said that there was a
LOT of fighting and bickering. She said that my sister got so upset that she
pushed my niece into a wall. She said that she put the restraining order on
her mother because she didn't want to go back to the house at all because she
was afraid that the arguement would continue. I guess both of them said some
pretty nasty things to each other. She got the restraining order so that she
could bring a police officer to the house to get her belongings. That way the
argument couldn't start again.
She told me that she DID tell the judge a "story" in order to get the
restraining order. She was just terribly afraid of this argument starting up
again.
I guess that the only thing we can do is let her go on with her life. Make her
own mistakes. I'm just so afraid for her.
Thanks.
|
1281.17 | support if needed | ASDG::CALL | | Mon Jul 13 1992 17:36 | 9 |
| Tell your sister that this WILL blow over. It may take some time. When
your neice has grown up a little and has realized a few things. Some
time in the future they will talk and come to some understandings. In
the heat of anger things can be said that we don't mean. You can
divorce a husband but you can't divorce your kids. The love bond will
always be there. It's called unconditional love. I know your sister is
just trying to tell her some things for her own good. There isn't
anything your sister can do at the moment but wait. If she needs some
extra support right now you can contact me off line.
|
1281.18 | | CSLALL::LSUNDELL | I'm my old self again | Tue Jul 14 1992 01:21 | 11 |
| I agree with .17. The only way she's going to learn is if she falls on
her own face and skins her knees. And given time, she'll probably see
him for what he is, and realize that "mom was right"....ah yes, how
many of us look back now and say that? :-))
And as far as that comment about him being "only 17"...he's old enough
to know better AND right from wrong. If you were talking about an 11
or 12 year old, I might agree with that, but not a 17 year old.
Lynne
|
1281.20 | A reply from the "anonymous" basenoter | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | Hey Cat! That's MY tunafish! | Tue Jul 28 1992 18:18 | 28 |
| Hello everyone ... My name is Holly Taylor. I'm the originator of this
note.
I just thought I'd tell you that things have worked out finally. My
niece is coming home in two weeks. She has made an obligation to take
care of a friend's little boy while she's on vacation, but after that
she will be home.
I guess it was a so called "friend" that was actually the instigator in
all of this. Her "friend" told her to put the restraining order on
her mother. The reasoning was "then she can't make you go back home".
Her "friend" was also the one who got her to change her address and
told her NOT to call her mother.
She is still seeing this guy, unfortunately. But as long as we know
that she's all right, we really don't care. At one time she said that
she was going to go live in a homeless shelter.
But she has promised that the check that is suppposed to go to her
mother WILL go to her mother. And she has promised to live by her
mother's rules. She will be allowed to see this boy, but he will not
be allowed into the house.
I just thought I'd reveal myself since a lot of you already know me.
Thanks for all of your help and support.
Holly
|