Anonymous wrote:Does she go to your daughter's school. Tell your daughter she must tell the guidance counselor. Give her a week to do it. Tell her (and do it) you are contacting the counselor that she will be coming in to discuss a concern about a friend. You would also like the counselor to talk with your daughter about peer relationships.
Empower your daughter by teaching her skills and that action is better than inaction.
Anonymous wrote:Hmm...sorry but this friend would be ghosted very soon by my DD and I would devote a lot of time and effort on my DD to talk to her, explain things to her and divert her towards more positive endeavors.
Parenting is tough. You have to put in lots of time and be available to your kids, otherwise, very soon your kid will be cutting or sexting or whatever path such bad influence friends lead your kid to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is tough. I will tell you cutting is contagious, kids can get the idea from eachother so this is a problem. I would actually call the school counselor and share what is in the text. Have the counselor keep it anonymous, but this is a child who has mental health struggled and needs help.
I keep open up the lines of communication with your DD and get her thoughts. They may be a step ahead of you in thinking she needs to step back because it's too overwhelming. I would look for signs of cutting in your own daughter. I would make sure she knows she can always talk to you. I would share concerns gently, but let her know she makes her own choices.
Along these same lines, I've had a lot of conversations with DD about how you adopt the behaviors and feelings of people you surround yourself with. We've had some difficult discussions about this over the last year, and it's an ongoing effort, but I think DD has realized the fastest route to mental health struggles is to surround herself with friends who do. I realize that's an unpopular opinion and cold hearted. One friend who cuts is an anomaly. But that friend likely has other friends who are doing the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do a lot of listening without judgment. Stay curious rather than giving into your need to give advice. Car rides are the best times for these conversations. There’s something about not having to face one another. That’s where I’ve learned the most from my teens.
“I read Sally wants to cut herself. What’s your thinking about that? How does that make you feel?”
Paraphrase what she’s saying without judging or trying to solve: “So it makes you feel scared. That makes sense. What are you thinking you might do?”
And so on.
It’s okay to say how you’re feeling, but only after she’s had a chance to talk. “I need you to know that I’m worried for her and for you. That’s a lot to handle. What help can I provide?”
who talks like this FCS? it sounds so fake
I think this is the from Wendy Byrde school of parenting - where you're so antisocial that you have no idea how to have a meaningful personal conversation with loved ones
That’s so cool how you and PP can just sit back and criticize what others offer. You don’t put anything helpful on the table for OP to ponder. Hang back and just toss out your criticism. Super helpful.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do a lot of listening without judgment. Stay curious rather than giving into your need to give advice. Car rides are the best times for these conversations. There’s something about not having to face one another. That’s where I’ve learned the most from my teens.
“I read Sally wants to cut herself. What’s your thinking about that? How does that make you feel?”
Paraphrase what she’s saying without judging or trying to solve: “So it makes you feel scared. That makes sense. What are you thinking you might do?”
And so on.
It’s okay to say how you’re feeling, but only after she’s had a chance to talk. “I need you to know that I’m worried for her and for you. That’s a lot to handle. What help can I provide?”
who talks like this FCS? it sounds so fake
Anonymous wrote:Hmm...sorry but this friend would be ghosted very soon by my DD and I would devote a lot of time and effort on my DD to talk to her, explain things to her and divert her towards more positive endeavors.
Parenting is tough. You have to put in lots of time and be available to your kids, otherwise, very soon your kid will be cutting or sexting or whatever path such bad influence friends lead your kid to.
Anonymous wrote:This is tough. I will tell you cutting is contagious, kids can get the idea from eachother so this is a problem. I would actually call the school counselor and share what is in the text. Have the counselor keep it anonymous, but this is a child who has mental health struggled and needs help.
I keep open up the lines of communication with your DD and get her thoughts. They may be a step ahead of you in thinking she needs to step back because it's too overwhelming. I would look for signs of cutting in your own daughter. I would make sure she knows she can always talk to you. I would share concerns gently, but let her know she makes her own choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do a lot of listening without judgment. Stay curious rather than giving into your need to give advice. Car rides are the best times for these conversations. There’s something about not having to face one another. That’s where I’ve learned the most from my teens.
“I read Sally wants to cut herself. What’s your thinking about that? How does that make you feel?”
Paraphrase what she’s saying without judging or trying to solve: “So it makes you feel scared. That makes sense. What are you thinking you might do?”
And so on.
It’s okay to say how you’re feeling, but only after she’s had a chance to talk. “I need you to know that I’m worried for her and for you. That’s a lot to handle. What help can I provide?”
who talks like this FCS? it sounds so fake
I think this is the from Wendy Byrde school of parenting - where you're so antisocial that you have no idea how to have a meaningful personal conversation with loved ones
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do a lot of listening without judgment. Stay curious rather than giving into your need to give advice. Car rides are the best times for these conversations. There’s something about not having to face one another. That’s where I’ve learned the most from my teens.
“I read Sally wants to cut herself. What’s your thinking about that? How does that make you feel?”
Paraphrase what she’s saying without judging or trying to solve: “So it makes you feel scared. That makes sense. What are you thinking you might do?”
And so on.
It’s okay to say how you’re feeling, but only after she’s had a chance to talk. “I need you to know that I’m worried for her and for you. That’s a lot to handle. What help can I provide?”
who talks like this FCS? it sounds so fake