We are working together. We are also all working together with a therapist to work through these and other issues. |
| OP, I fully where you’re coming from. Kids are just exasperating some days or for some months. I recommend laying back a little and maintaining communications. I feel if you push too much at this point, will lose hold of the kid. Hang out with her. Do some fun things. Maybe once she sees the pressure is off she will cooperate more. |
OP that does sound very extreme, poor thing seems like she’s struggling (as are you of course). Have you done any neuropsychological testing? The food and hair brushing aversion sounds like it could be anxiety or autism? Dropping the activity seems like an easy one in the short term. Does she struggle to fall asleep? Would a sleep aid like a low dose of melatonin help? |
| PP again - and personally chores would not be the hill I die on. She sounds overwhelmed generally and perhaps taking things off her plate will help. I never had to do any chores growing up and yet I am an exceedingly clean and responsible adult. Cleaning up after herself is another story however because that’s just courtesy in my mind. |
This--this sounds like neurodivergence. |
| If she needs to eat more, let her pick what she wants to eat. Ice cream, cookies, whatever. She needs a eval for neurodivergence. |
| Try to establish an actual relationship with her rather than acting as her owner/handler. |
| If you want her to grow, she has to eat. If you force her to eat and she doesn't like it... guess what... she'll not eat. At 14, you should not be badgering anyone. She should have her own agenda. Where were you until now? I have a 15 yo and there's absolutely no way I'd be in her business like you are. I did what you do when she was younger, until about age 10-11, make sure she had food, sleep and activities. After that, the chickens come home to roost. |
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I mean — not eating, not brushing hair and teeth and refusing activities for a teen girl screams that she may have some neurodivergence or a mental health issue. I would get an evaluation before I thought this kid was lazy.
It sounds like you veered towards authoritarian parenting, which may be blinding you to a child that needs some real help. I would try to stop thinking of this as bad behavior for 6-12 months while you seek some other types of help. If they all say this kid is just fine, then you can revisit consequences. |
| Neuropsych. And spend ten minutes a day doing what she wants, one on one (for each parent). With no mention of chores, homework, brushing hair, food, growth, anything. It helps build and maintain connection, and that’s the most powerful tool you have (cynically) |
This. Something is going on. Depression? Autism? ADHD? ODD? Has she been screened for any mental health issues? Eating disorders? |
She’s going to be evaluated and is going to therapy as well. We are exploring all avenues. But it is really hard- she is very angry about going to therapy and is refusing to talk. She also said she won’t do the evaluations, and is very angry about us going down that path. She denies she has any issues. |
| Hi OP...this sounds really hard and I'm sure there are plenty of positives but you are drowning in the negative. I understand and can relate. Our daughter similarly went down similar path. She did seek therapy but therapy for her was a gripe session and refusal to work on herself. She struggled with motivation, confidence (academically, physically), keeping friends, blaming others etc. Food was a big thing and we struggled down the path of an eating disorder with a kid who refused to work with nutritionist. Its awful. Please watch the food thing..it is the priority of everything you are talking about and needs to be addressed first. Daughter had a neuropsych test and were surprised at neurodivergence (she was older). Suggested DBT. It's a struggle but you may want to look into it and a group who has a neurodivergent ASD focus. Good luck OP...turning the ship is going to be a long road that requires a partnership with you and your partner as well as your daughter. |
| You also need her screened for ARFID and anorexia. In the meantime, let her eat WHATEVER she wants. Don’t worry about healthy eating. Just get calories into her. Any calories. |
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Are there any 14 year olds who aren’t sometimes rude and recalcitrant?
It’s pretty normal and even healthy for young teens to set out to become more independent and separate from their parents. A lot of posters here have good advice about choosing your battles carefully. You’ll get through this, and even look back and laugh a bit at times. And on the posyside, I found that my kids improved a lot when they were 15- so hold on, there’s a light at the end of the terrible teens tunnel. |