Good advice. Dd went through this in middle school and got through it but it took some time. It's hard to see your kid enthralled with a toxic friendship that you want them to walk away from. Dd also happens to be bi but that was a separate thing from the middle school mean girl thing. In our experience, kids' ideas about their sexuality evolve over time. Be supportive and let her figure it out.Anonymous wrote:Other than 7:13, I agree with the advice the PPs gave you. You need to separate your DDs statement of her sexuality from the toxic dynamics of the relationship. My DD went through something similar this summer and it was really tough to watch. But, she will encounter people like this toxic 'friend' throughout her life and she needs to learn to navigate through it. It's really important that she learn what healthy, respectful relationships are. It's okay to fight, have disagreements - learning to recover after a fight is also a life skill. But, there are boundaries.
I recommend Queen Bees and Wannabes. http://www.amazon.com/Queen-Bees-Wannabes-Boyfriends-Realities/dp/0307454444
Anonymous wrote:Agree with all the above, 00:29 in particular.
I think you also need to relize that your influence over all of ghis is limited. These are the kind of things that happen in adolescence, and it is her journey.
Anonymous wrote:You need to separate a couple of different things. You need to accept that DD is bisexual. This is your daughter who you love, and this is who she thinks she is. So tell her you love her and accept her.
The reality is, school is starting soon. Get DD busy. Push her to get into a sport and a club and another after-school activity. Encourage and facilitate friendships with other girls. Basically, dilute the Alpha's importance. Without mentioning the Alpha, have conversations with DD about mean girls, how friends treat each other, qualities we look for in friends, etc. Let HER make the decision to pull away from the Alpha.
Talk to her about homosexuality the same way black parents have to talk to their kids about being black in public. Some people are VERY prejudice, and it's completely wrong, but you need to protect yourself from these people. Suggest ways she can find out friends views on homosexuality and bisexuality BEFORE coming out to them. Suggest that she think VERY hard about coming out to friends who tend to gossip.
But tell her it's okay that she's bisexual and you always love and accept her.