Anonymous wrote:My 15yo desperately wants to attend a concert that would require travel (7-8 hours round trip), a hotel stay, missed school, and time off work. Tickets alone are already out of budget, and adding travel, lodging, and pet boarding makes it financially unrealistic.
She’s very upset and says I’m “ruining her life,” especially since a friend is going with their parent. I understand the disappointment, but this just isn’t something we can responsibly afford.
How can I help her cope with the disappointment and feel heard, while still holding this boundary? Is this just a “give it time” situation, or are there ways to make it easier on her?
Anonymous wrote:OP this isn’t advice for your daughter, but it’s a good idea for you to take a step back and look at this whole situation.
When did it become “normal“ for a teenager to attend an out-of-town event that cost several hundred dollars and includes travel and lodging and requires a parent to miss work? Understanding that in the age of the Eras Tour this is something lots of kids did, but if you step away from the idea as a whole and examine it, it’s actually pretty ridiculous. Kids can get very caught up in stuff that their friends are doing, but as an adult, you have the perspective of understanding what’s reasonable and what’s not. The budget you’re describing would pay for half of a family vacation.
Part of your job as a parent is helping your kids understand how the world works and unless you’re a very wealthy family, out of town expensive concerts are not a one-off throwaway activity.
In short, you sound like a kind mom but put on some grown-up pants here and have a CTJ talk with DD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not an item to break into emergency fund for…
OP here. Absolutely not! Hence the post! With that said, any advice for explaining this to a 15yo whose life has just been ruined? 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 15yo desperately wants to attend a concert that would require travel (7-8 hours round trip), a hotel stay, missed school, and time off work. Tickets alone are already out of budget, and adding travel, lodging, and pet boarding makes it financially unrealistic.
She’s very upset and says I’m “ruining her life,” especially since a friend is going with their parent. I understand the disappointment, but this just isn’t something we can responsibly afford.
How can I help her cope with the disappointment and feel heard, while still holding this boundary? Is this just a “give it time” situation, or are there ways to make it easier on her?
Ignore her. Stop repeating yourself, or keep repeating yourself. The concert logistics do not work for us.
Don’t argue with terrorists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 15 she should be able to understand that it's just too expensive. She is not 5 anymore. I don't know why you're feeling guilty about this at all.
Well, of course I feel bad. I remember being 15 and seeing my favorite band in concert, and what an awesome experience that was. Of course I want to give her that same experience and feel bad that I can’t make it work for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not an item to break into emergency fund for…
OP here. Absolutely not! Hence the post! With that said, any advice for explaining this to a 15yo whose life has just been ruined? 😂
Just let her life be ruined. It's ok for teenagers to feel disappointment and frustration. Dealing with difficult feelings are simply a part of living. You tell her the real, not sugar-coated reasons you won't be attending, and that's the end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not an item to break into emergency fund for…
OP here. Absolutely not! Hence the post! With that said, any advice for explaining this to a 15yo whose life has just been ruined? 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not an item to break into emergency fund for…
OP here. Absolutely not! Hence the post! With that said, any advice for explaining this to a 15yo whose life has just been ruined? 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not an item to break into emergency fund for…
OP here. Absolutely not! Hence the post! With that said, any advice for explaining this to a 15yo whose life has just been ruined? 😂
People are having a hard time explaining it to you. I think we could explain it to your 15 year old in 3 seconds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not an item to break into emergency fund for…
OP here. Absolutely not! Hence the post! With that said, any advice for explaining this to a 15yo whose life has just been ruined? 😂