Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Tweens and Teens
Reply to "Teen seems completely withdrawn and dependent"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My stepdaughter is turning 18 soon and I’m increasingly worried about her. Her mom isn’t in the picture. She used to be a very high-achieving student (4.0 through sophomore year), talked about big plans for the future, and seemed motivated. Then something shifted. She started failing classes junior year, got multiple Cs, and senior year started with straight Fs. She is now barely graduating and says she has no interest in college, trade school, or any further education at all. She only leaves the house for school, nothing else. She takes a 3-4 hour nap after school, and wakes up at 2pm on weekends, though she goes to bed at 10 or 11. She doesn’t participate in activities, has no hobbies or passions that I can tell besides being on her phone/social media, and doesn’t really maintain friendships even though she has a few acquaintances. At home, she does very little independently. She doesn’t do chores (including cleaning her room) or laundry and gets upset if I don’t wash her clothes for her. She doesn’t want to drive and hasn’t gotten her permit yet. She isn’t interested in learning life skills like cooking and relies on me to make meals for her. Sometimes she just orders fast food and that will be her only meal for the day. She acts helpless with a lot of everyday things and has the dependence level of a much younger child. She whines and cries about everything. For example, if I’m going to the store she’ll ask me to buy everything for her or when we’ll get this or that, or she’ll say there’s “nothing to eat” while standing in front of a full fridge because she doesn’t know what to make for herself. She constantly asks questions about things instead of trying to figure things out on her own. The only positive thing she does do is that she goes outside daily with her younger siblings (2-3hrs), takes them to the park, and plays with them daily outside and indoors (plays games, watches TV, etc). I know all teens are different, but she seems so disconnected from life compared to other kids her age. What can we do to help? [/quote] NP: While I get why you're concerned about your StepDD and absolutely you have many reasons to be concerned, it always drives me nuts when people post scenarios like this and never say whether they've actually named everything they're worried about to the DD or DS, and then shared here what their answers were? Have you done that OP? Have you named all the behaviors and changes that you've noticed and asked her why she feels they've changed, and if she's not interested in college what is her plan, what does she want for herself? Also have you and whatever other parent is in her life (if any) discussed what you will and won't let her do? If she just wants to live at home until she's 40 and complain about food, are you going to let her? Or what are your parameters for her needing to work or contribute to the household if she's not going to college? Also you should talk to a therapist who works with teens and young adults. You should run all this by either her doctor or a therapist and ask for help. Or start wit her high school counselor, since I"m sure they've encountered this before, it's sadly not that unusual. But ask a professional for guidance and ideas on how to support her and hopefully help her get unstuck. And if you DID say all this to her... what were her responses??[/quote] +1 Did she explain?[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics