Anonymous wrote:It has been proven that the whole tough love and total abstinence approach to stopping substance abuse doesn’t work.
Anonymous wrote:Are the sores viruses from sharing pens or like burns or blisters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter had the canker sores. I don’t know what to do. She has been grounded and we tried to share realistic, gross info about what this stuff is doing to her but so many of her friends are doing this stuff at school, right after school, etc.
If a teen gets cut off too much from their friend group that can be dangerous for mental health.
Quit being such a pansy. This will quickly spin out of control if you don’t learn how to grow a backbone, and soon.
We grounded her for 6 weeks, took her debit card away, checked every inch of her room, took away driving privileges. The issue is she can’t stay grounded forever and ALL of her friends are into this stuff.
Professional advice is to build back what they are allowed to do and make sure you convey you still love them. Boundaries and emotional support supposedly works better than punishment I can’t somehow make her live the rest of her teen years friendless or somehow get her all new friends. Tough to navigate….
I notice you didn't mention removing the phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter had the canker sores. I don’t know what to do. She has been grounded and we tried to share realistic, gross info about what this stuff is doing to her but so many of her friends are doing this stuff at school, right after school, etc.
If a teen gets cut off too much from their friend group that can be dangerous for mental health.
Quit being such a pansy. This will quickly spin out of control if you don’t learn how to grow a backbone, and soon.
We grounded her for 6 weeks, took her debit card away, checked every inch of her room, took away driving privileges. The issue is she can’t stay grounded forever and ALL of her friends are into this stuff.
Professional advice is to build back what they are allowed to do and make sure you convey you still love them. Boundaries and emotional support supposedly works better than punishment I can’t somehow make her live the rest of her teen years friendless or somehow get her all new friends. Tough to navigate….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter had the canker sores. I don’t know what to do. She has been grounded and we tried to share realistic, gross info about what this stuff is doing to her but so many of her friends are doing this stuff at school, right after school, etc.
If a teen gets cut off too much from their friend group that can be dangerous for mental health.
Quit being such a pansy. This will quickly spin out of control if you don’t learn how to grow a backbone, and soon.
We grounded her for 6 weeks, took her debit card away, checked every inch of her room, took away driving privileges. The issue is she can’t stay grounded forever and ALL of her friends are into this stuff.
Professional advice is to build back what they are allowed to do and make sure you convey you still love them. Boundaries and emotional support supposedly works better than punishment I can’t somehow make her live the rest of her teen years friendless or somehow get her all new friends. Tough to navigate….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter had the canker sores. I don’t know what to do. She has been grounded and we tried to share realistic, gross info about what this stuff is doing to her but so many of her friends are doing this stuff at school, right after school, etc.
If a teen gets cut off too much from their friend group that can be dangerous for mental health.
Quit being such a pansy. This will quickly spin out of control if you don’t learn how to grow a backbone, and soon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter had the canker sores. I don’t know what to do. She has been grounded and we tried to share realistic, gross info about what this stuff is doing to her but so many of her friends are doing this stuff at school, right after school, etc.
If a teen gets cut off too much from their friend group that can be dangerous for mental health.
Quit being such a pansy. This will quickly spin out of control if you don’t learn how to grow a backbone, and soon.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter had the canker sores. I don’t know what to do. She has been grounded and we tried to share realistic, gross info about what this stuff is doing to her but so many of her friends are doing this stuff at school, right after school, etc.
If a teen gets cut off too much from their friend group that can be dangerous for mental health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell her she’s going to school feeling like crap then. She isn’t contagious. She’s trashing her sinuses and respiratory system so she can deal with the discomfort. Don’t let her miss school anymore when she wakes up feeling bad. Have fun vaping and feeling like crap at schoooool
I mean ... this is how high school is now. The "popular" kids hang out in the bathrooms, vaping. Normal kids can't or won't even go in there. Sometimes I see kids I knew when they were little and they look like wasted 40-year-olds. It is really taking a toll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently found out my DD’s canker sores were really vape mouth. So mad.
Someone sent me screenshots of her on a social media account talking about how they are constantly vaping.
What did you do about it?
Child is almost an adult. I feel pretty powerless here. Stopped allowance. At the very least I’m not paying for this.