I told my teen I hate her, I meant it.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Sounds. like this is a big problem with your husband. The two of you need to be a united front in your parenting, and he needs to come down hard on her when she's disrespectful to you. Work on your issues with your DH.


That's terrible advice if perhaps it's OP who's the problem. You don't know why DH sides with DD, and OP didn't give details about what is so horrible about DD. And honestly this post feels like the constant troll who's here who's always starting convos that get everyone reacting just to watch people freak out.

But either way, even if this is a real post, maybe her DH is siding with the DD because DW/Mom is exacerbating the situation?
Anonymous
I think the real problem is social media addiction.
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Anonymous wrote:OP, your 16 year old daughter fears that she will get cancer.

Your 16 year old daughter fears that you will abandon her due to your cancer.

Your 16 year old cannot cope with your cancer and hates that your cancer has dominated her life.

OP, cancer, not your daughter, is the enemy.

Coping with harsh realities affects individuals differently.

OP, you hate your cancer and you hate what cancer has done to your life, your marriage, and to your relationship with your daughter.

OP, the first step is to correctly identify the enemy, and the enemy is not your daughter.


You are making a lot of assumptions, PP. Sometimes (often, actually) - teens are just really, really hard on the parents. It’s common.


And unfortunately some personality disordered parents are just “really, really hard” on their kids. It’s common.


+10million.


Maybe because they were irreparably damaged by their own parents. In that way nobody is ever wrong, nobody asks to be born.


This is true, but someone comes along to break the chain. My mom was totally disorders. I made huge strides not to be and I am not. My mother criticized me for taking parenting classes, saying she didn’t “need” them. I responded “well, I think I do”. At the same time I was thinking ‘uh, yeah, you absolutely did need them! I had a terrible example and that is why I need them’. But I didn’t actually say what I thought. I have 2 kids through this stage, one in this stage, and one younger. I think I’m doing well. No, I would never say something as hurtful as OP did. I actually very much love my kids and they know it, even though and especially when we fight. No one has ever said they hate anyone in our house.


So when you were in remission from cancer did you not miss a beat?


You folks keep making apologies for a mother who said she hated her child and meant it. Totally messed up.


WHO HAS CANCER!

The kid is a fxxx up. A MEAN GIRL.



She's 16 and just spent the last few years watching her mom go through cancer, but okay I guess she's worthless because she did some very predictable teenage things.


DP. My siblings and I managed to get through our teenage years without ever ONCE telling either of our parents that we hated them, despite lots of arguments and drama.

I don’t think this is “predictable teenage” behavior. I think it is just plain awful behavior. Maybe this is a good learning moment for the kid, to learn that if you throw around phrases like “I hate you” you might hear it back someday. Yes, it is devastating to hear this from a parent, but maybe hearing it is the only way this girl will learn that words matter (even when she is the one saying them).

(FTR I absolutely think OP needs to apologize if she wants to maintain a relationship with her daughter. However, I am taken aback by the posters who seem to have concluded that the daughter is an innocent victim and OP is a horrible monster. They BOTH said it, and a 16 year old is absolutely old enough to be mature enough to know better.)


I mean, even little kids will say "I hate you" to their parents. It really is predictable behavior and is incredibly common. I don't get the pearl clutching about how people can't believe a 16 year old said this to her parent. So many kids say "I hate you" to their parents at some point or another that if you google "teenager said I hate you" you will get literally millions of results linking to article explaining to parents what to do in this situation.

Also, as many people have explained, this particular teen has had a very atypical adolescence, in that her mom has been struggling with cancer for the last several years. If you are familiar with the ACES test/score, having a family member with a serious illness is a major source of stress and trauma that can impact people into adulthood. So that's why many of us find it very unsurprising that this child had aggression and conflict issues, as these are very normal responses to the stress of watching a parent struggle with a life threatening illness in your tween/early teen years.

But anyway, the "I hate you"s don't cancel each other out because they mean different things. A parent and a child are not equal and don't have the same responsibilities or roles in their relationship. So even though they said the same thing, what OP did was worse. For a child to say "I hate you" to a parent is hurtful, yes. But it can also be a way of testing boundaries, getting attention (even negative attention can be better to a child than no attention), trying to provoke a conflict in an effort to address past issues that the parent views as settled, etc. Yes, it is immature. But a 16 year old is less mature than a 30 or 40 year old.

When a parent tells a child "I hate you" it means something else. Anger, rejection, burn out.

For a child, this behavior is a clumsy way of trying to force engagement. For a parent, it's a way to end engagement. That's why what OP said is worse than what her DD said. Her DD's comment was a cry for help. OP's comment was a way of saying "I will not help you."


Everyone is excusing the daughter for having had to endure her mother going through cancer, but no one is extending any grace to the mother who had to endure cancer!

I didn’t say they canceled each other out, and I am not arguing about which is worse. I am saying the daughter is not an innocent victim, she provoked her mother, got a response she wasn’t expecting, and now hopefully they can BOTH learn from it.

OP is the adult and the parent. She has a higher responsibility here. Cancer doesn’t give you free rein to be a sh!tty parent. Blaming your child for your cancer is the epitome of red flag parenting.


At no point did she blame her daughter for her cancer you illiterate doofus.

Party A having more responsibility does NOT mean Party B has ZERO responsibility.

I don’t know if anyone said the child has zero responsibility. In fact if you bothered to read that post you’d see it says the mom has ‘higher level’ not ‘all’ responsibility “you illiterate doofus”. Clearly the parent sets the tone for parenting decisions, and those decisions include saying she hates her own child.

If she feels so bad she should apologize.


If YOU had read the post you would understand that she feels bad not because she told her daughter she hates her, too (remember, this darling angel told her mom she hates her and mom responded in kind); she feels bad because she meant it. She feels bad because she is at the point in her relationship with her child where she legitimately hates her. We all know you’re not supposed to say it, but OP is under a lot of stress and she snapped. You know, like a real person.

So if anyone was interested in providing useful advice to OP it would involve how to not hate her daughter. Lashing out at her with all of your unresolved mommy issues isn’t helping her OR HER DAUGHTER. Some of you are using OP as a punching bag because you either have not gotten effective therapy to deal with your own sh!t, or you just haven’t grown TF up yet and are stuck in bratty entitled teenager mode.

Yet again you aren't even reading. No where in OP does it say that. You are projecting again.


Reread the OP again. It is you who is confused.

"yet I feel awful"
not "I feel bad because I meant it"
Gosh it must be difficult for you to get through the day when you make up constant conversations that never happened.


Oh boy. You must be one of the Americans who didn’t read a book last year.

You don't think its possible she fees bad because she verbalized it? Whether or not you hate your child, the biggest issue here is saying it to her. Quite interesting that you gloss over that entirely.


If she meant it why in the world would she feel bad she verbalized it? If she was asking everyone how she should punish her daughter for continuing to be rude to her you might have a point, yet she feels awful and you can’t fathom why.

You can still mean things and not want the person to know. You can realize how hurtful the words would be to hear out loud. At least most people with any sort of self awareness would.


Right so why is everyone heaping so much abuse on OP? She gets it. She knows. She knows she words are hurtful and it’s not right, it didn’t make her feel better to say it out loud. She feels awful for obvious reasons.

So why is apologizing to her daughter such a crazy suggestion? I’m not sure why op are jumping all over posters suggesting this. If she wants even a sliver of a chance at repairing their relationship she needs to own it, apologize, and do better moving forward. The longer she leaves this hanging in the air, the more damage it’s doing to her daughter and their relationship.


Nobody wants your advice when you start out calling them a shitty parent. Look back at the language used here and maybe it will make sense.


DP
If the shoe fits....
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Anonymous wrote:OP, your 16 year old daughter fears that she will get cancer.

Your 16 year old daughter fears that you will abandon her due to your cancer.

Your 16 year old cannot cope with your cancer and hates that your cancer has dominated her life.

OP, cancer, not your daughter, is the enemy.

Coping with harsh realities affects individuals differently.

OP, you hate your cancer and you hate what cancer has done to your life, your marriage, and to your relationship with your daughter.

OP, the first step is to correctly identify the enemy, and the enemy is not your daughter.


You are making a lot of assumptions, PP. Sometimes (often, actually) - teens are just really, really hard on the parents. It’s common.


And unfortunately some personality disordered parents are just “really, really hard” on their kids. It’s common.


+10million.


Maybe because they were irreparably damaged by their own parents. In that way nobody is ever wrong, nobody asks to be born.


This is true, but someone comes along to break the chain. My mom was totally disorders. I made huge strides not to be and I am not. My mother criticized me for taking parenting classes, saying she didn’t “need” them. I responded “well, I think I do”. At the same time I was thinking ‘uh, yeah, you absolutely did need them! I had a terrible example and that is why I need them’. But I didn’t actually say what I thought. I have 2 kids through this stage, one in this stage, and one younger. I think I’m doing well. No, I would never say something as hurtful as OP did. I actually very much love my kids and they know it, even though and especially when we fight. No one has ever said they hate anyone in our house.


So when you were in remission from cancer did you not miss a beat?


You folks keep making apologies for a mother who said she hated her child and meant it. Totally messed up.


WHO HAS CANCER!

The kid is a fxxx up. A MEAN GIRL.



She's 16 and just spent the last few years watching her mom go through cancer, but okay I guess she's worthless because she did some very predictable teenage things.


DP. My siblings and I managed to get through our teenage years without ever ONCE telling either of our parents that we hated them, despite lots of arguments and drama.

I don’t think this is “predictable teenage” behavior. I think it is just plain awful behavior. Maybe this is a good learning moment for the kid, to learn that if you throw around phrases like “I hate you” you might hear it back someday. Yes, it is devastating to hear this from a parent, but maybe hearing it is the only way this girl will learn that words matter (even when she is the one saying them).

(FTR I absolutely think OP needs to apologize if she wants to maintain a relationship with her daughter. However, I am taken aback by the posters who seem to have concluded that the daughter is an innocent victim and OP is a horrible monster. They BOTH said it, and a 16 year old is absolutely old enough to be mature enough to know better.)


I mean, even little kids will say "I hate you" to their parents. It really is predictable behavior and is incredibly common. I don't get the pearl clutching about how people can't believe a 16 year old said this to her parent. So many kids say "I hate you" to their parents at some point or another that if you google "teenager said I hate you" you will get literally millions of results linking to article explaining to parents what to do in this situation.

Also, as many people have explained, this particular teen has had a very atypical adolescence, in that her mom has been struggling with cancer for the last several years. If you are familiar with the ACES test/score, having a family member with a serious illness is a major source of stress and trauma that can impact people into adulthood. So that's why many of us find it very unsurprising that this child had aggression and conflict issues, as these are very normal responses to the stress of watching a parent struggle with a life threatening illness in your tween/early teen years.

But anyway, the "I hate you"s don't cancel each other out because they mean different things. A parent and a child are not equal and don't have the same responsibilities or roles in their relationship. So even though they said the same thing, what OP did was worse. For a child to say "I hate you" to a parent is hurtful, yes. But it can also be a way of testing boundaries, getting attention (even negative attention can be better to a child than no attention), trying to provoke a conflict in an effort to address past issues that the parent views as settled, etc. Yes, it is immature. But a 16 year old is less mature than a 30 or 40 year old.

When a parent tells a child "I hate you" it means something else. Anger, rejection, burn out.

For a child, this behavior is a clumsy way of trying to force engagement. For a parent, it's a way to end engagement. That's why what OP said is worse than what her DD said. Her DD's comment was a cry for help. OP's comment was a way of saying "I will not help you."


Everyone is excusing the daughter for having had to endure her mother going through cancer, but no one is extending any grace to the mother who had to endure cancer!

I didn’t say they canceled each other out, and I am not arguing about which is worse. I am saying the daughter is not an innocent victim, she provoked her mother, got a response she wasn’t expecting, and now hopefully they can BOTH learn from it.

OP is the adult and the parent. She has a higher responsibility here. Cancer doesn’t give you free rein to be a sh!tty parent. Blaming your child for your cancer is the epitome of red flag parenting.


At no point did she blame her daughter for her cancer you illiterate doofus.

Party A having more responsibility does NOT mean Party B has ZERO responsibility.

I don’t know if anyone said the child has zero responsibility. In fact if you bothered to read that post you’d see it says the mom has ‘higher level’ not ‘all’ responsibility “you illiterate doofus”. Clearly the parent sets the tone for parenting decisions, and those decisions include saying she hates her own child.

If she feels so bad she should apologize.


If YOU had read the post you would understand that she feels bad not because she told her daughter she hates her, too (remember, this darling angel told her mom she hates her and mom responded in kind); she feels bad because she meant it. She feels bad because she is at the point in her relationship with her child where she legitimately hates her. We all know you’re not supposed to say it, but OP is under a lot of stress and she snapped. You know, like a real person.

So if anyone was interested in providing useful advice to OP it would involve how to not hate her daughter. Lashing out at her with all of your unresolved mommy issues isn’t helping her OR HER DAUGHTER. Some of you are using OP as a punching bag because you either have not gotten effective therapy to deal with your own sh!t, or you just haven’t grown TF up yet and are stuck in bratty entitled teenager mode.

Yet again you aren't even reading. No where in OP does it say that. You are projecting again.


Reread the OP again. It is you who is confused.

"yet I feel awful"
not "I feel bad because I meant it"
Gosh it must be difficult for you to get through the day when you make up constant conversations that never happened.


Oh boy. You must be one of the Americans who didn’t read a book last year.

You don't think its possible she fees bad because she verbalized it? Whether or not you hate your child, the biggest issue here is saying it to her. Quite interesting that you gloss over that entirely.


If she meant it why in the world would she feel bad she verbalized it? If she was asking everyone how she should punish her daughter for continuing to be rude to her you might have a point, yet she feels awful and you can’t fathom why.

You can still mean things and not want the person to know. You can realize how hurtful the words would be to hear out loud. At least most people with any sort of self awareness would.


Right so why is everyone heaping so much abuse on OP? She gets it. She knows. She knows she words are hurtful and it’s not right, it didn’t make her feel better to say it out loud. She feels awful for obvious reasons.

So why is apologizing to her daughter such a crazy suggestion? I’m not sure why op are jumping all over posters suggesting this. If she wants even a sliver of a chance at repairing their relationship she needs to own it, apologize, and do better moving forward. The longer she leaves this hanging in the air, the more damage it’s doing to her daughter and their relationship.


Nobody wants your advice when you start out calling them a shitty parent. Look back at the language used here and maybe it will make sense.

Many of the posts didnt say that. In fact, the post Im referencing is one that pp (or you) argued about having more responsibility = none for the other party. I said if she feels so bad she should apologize and was told that wasn't helpful advice, and the only helpful advice this pp would welcome was how not to hate your child.


OP is not here waiting desperately for advice how to proceed. A lot of people derailed this thread and drove OP away. You're farting into the wind at this point.


We don't need to know that much about you.
Anonymous
Kids say, "I hate you!" to their parents. Their brains are not fully formed yet and they're giant balls of hormones and raging feelings and they need a safe place to vent. It's not excusing it -- kids need to apologize when they say or do hurtful things -- but for kids it's different. Parents shouldn't say, "I hate you!" to kids. It's completely different. You need to be the adult, the steady one in the room. You have access to adult friends and therapy and resources -- use them. And start modeling better behavior for your daughter, starting with a sincere apology: "I said I hate you and I'm so sorry. I should never have said that and it's not true. I love you and I will always love you. I was upset and I didn't handle it the way I should have." You can be a great example of how to apologize. Your cancer has undoubtedly been hard on your daughter, too. Is your husband "taking her side" because you're being unreasonable? You need therapy ASAP to handle this relationship better or you may lose your husband and your daughter. How do you think your husband will react to hearing that you told your daughter you hate her? I think most parents would be taken aback.
Anonymous
I hate my 15 year old daughter too. Don’t feel bad these little demons have to be from another planet. I don’t care to hear that their are kids forget that adults have feelings and shouldn’t have to deal with disrespectful demons
Anonymous
I feel the same way. But as others have said, please please try not to vocalize it just now. I know it is hard. Just walk away and address this when she is older and if you want to do that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I hate my 15 year old daughter too. Don’t feel bad these little demons have to be from another planet. I don’t care to hear that their are kids forget that adults have feelings and shouldn’t have to deal with disrespectful demons


They're not from another planet, they're from you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I hate my 15 year old daughter too. Don’t feel bad these little demons have to be from another planet. I don’t care to hear that their are kids forget that adults have feelings and shouldn’t have to deal with disrespectful demons


They're not from another planet, they're from you.

Tru dat!
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