Yup. Just text him "Larlo, it's important that you spend time with your father. The judge says you have to, and he is your father. So be sure to spend time with your father. Sincerely, your mom." And then it's his father's job to repair the relationship. |
This is so ridiculous it's almost stupid to answer it. It is probably OP sock-puppeting... But I'll bite. Nowhere has OP stated that her ex has made bad parenting choices nor are they a bad parent, period. In fact, OP identified right up front that the teen and other parent have a loving relationship. Perhaps you don't work so you don't understand what it means if an employer tells you to either relocate or lose your job. The job that is probably helping provide for the teen, BTW. If the teen says they are going to leave the other parent's house, OP should tell the teen they have a choice: Either stay and spend time with other parent, or if they return back to OP then they WILL be grounded and will not be going out with friends at "home" either. Choices equal consequences. A 15 year old it not too young to learn that. |
Banning a teenager from seeing friends every other weekend is inherently a bad parenting choice. It's not age-appropriate, and it's unrealistic. This is the father's choice, and choices equal consequences. He has chosen to damage his relationship by doing this. OP never said her ex had no choice but to move so far away. A better parent might have stayed nearer and taken the bad commute on himself, rather than forcing it on his child. Bad parenting choice. It's not OP's job to punish her child into wanting to spend time with his father. That's not how relationships work. We can't punish or coerce people into loving anyone. |
Would that work, though? Would OP's ex be satisfied if his son were successfully coerced into spending time with him, and lied and said he didn't want to see his friends? Lied and said an hour's commute was no big deal? That doesn't seem like the kind of parent-child relationship any psychologically healthy adult would want. |
You are being ridiculous and making up all sorts of assumptions- that the phyiscally distant parent had to move for work. YOU have twisted the narrative to fit your vision, and are suggesting imposing punative punishment on a 15 year old who wants to spend time with friends and, as is age appropriate, develop friendships and activities that aren't parent reliant. Furthermore, you've injected the idea of sock puppeting because you cannot conceive of another perspective. I'm brand new to this thread, btw. Just hate how you've put all the responsibility on the OP and none on the other parent. perhaps the other parent needs to develop some skills of compromising. |
Good way to alienate your kid and encourage them to be a runaway. Bad advice. The kid has a voice in the matter. Let it be heard. |
Wasn't there a similar thread about a year ago with a 17 year old? |
The are following your lead. Stop sabotaging the other parent and uphold the agreement. If they refuse have consequences. |
From follow-up post from OP:
“The parent the teen doesn’t want to see moved and is on the other side of the city now quite far from school and friends and isn’t amenable to teen spending a lot of time with friends on the weekend.” This parent wasn’t forced to relocate for work; they’re still in the same city. Inviting friends to stay doesn’t sound like an option because this parent wants their teen’s time and attention to him/herself. This issue is also bigger than the longer commute to school from this parent’s house and not getting to see friends on the weekends. Teen isn’t getting along with this parent, even though they are a loving parent. The problem isn’t even that teen sees this parent as too strict; OP says both households are equally strict. Teen just feels misunderstood and dismissed by this parent. These are not issues the other parent can fix, although, of course, they should do what they can to facilitate the relationship between teen and this parent. My divorce attorney says we parents can make any agreement we want, but teenagers will vote with their feet. Both parents forcing teen to spend half their time somewhere they don’t want to be, with a longer school commute and no friends on the weekends, will only damage the teen’s relationship with both parents. Parent who moved further away and doesn’t want teen to hang out with friends on the weekends needs to offer more flexibility. If they make everything their way or the highway, teen will choose the highway. |
OP need to offer flexibility and a reasonable arrangment. They are using friends, etc. as an excuse to damage the relationship with Dad and that's not ok. Friends don't come before parents. Terrible parenting. Maybe they moved where they could afford given child support and extras. It sounds like OP is setting this up for her needs. Or, its fake. |
I make it clear to my teen that he needs to make it work. 1) this won't be the last time he has to deal with difficult personalities 2) he needs college to be paid for 3) he will someday get to control the relationship. For now, he deals with it. |