Anonymous wrote:I’m noticing some things in my 13 year old daughter that concern me, and I’m wondering if others have navigated this successfully.
To be clear, I have no indication that she is a “mean girl,” but from things I’ve seen and read, I don’t think she is always as empathetic, thoughtful, or caring a friend as I would hope. She can be very focused on status, appearance, fitting in, and herself in a way that feels somewhat developmentally normal, but I also do not want to ignore it.
I also recognize my own role in this. She is a really hard working, conscientious kid with good grades, strong commitment to her club sport, and she is generally helpful when asked. Because of that, it has been easy for me to reward her with the latest clothes, accessories, and other material things she wants. I am starting to wonder whether I have unintentionally overemphasized achievement, status, and rewards and not enough kindness, perspective taking, or generosity.
I would love advice from parents who have successfully course corrected at this age. What actually helped build empathy, humility, gratitude, and genuine kindness in your tweens or teens? Especially for kids who are high achieving and socially aware but maybe becoming a little too invested in appearances or themselves.
I am hoping to use the summer intentionally and would really appreciate ideas, experiences, or even book or podcast recommendations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom here of a girl with an IEP who was severely bullied at school. Didn't want to go to school because of these female bullies. Without exception, the mothers were as mean as the daughters. As soon as I saw and overheard the mothers in their expensive clothing gossiping about whoever wasn't there, I knew exactly how the child got that way. Be a good example.
It sounds like OP is being a good example, by recognizing there is a potential problem and asking how to fix it. FWIW, as a teacher and mother of a teen, I see all different types of kids and having nice things does not always equal selfish, materialistic, unempathetic.
Anonymous wrote:Mom here of a girl with an IEP who was severely bullied at school. Didn't want to go to school because of these female bullies. Without exception, the mothers were as mean as the daughters. As soon as I saw and overheard the mothers in their expensive clothing gossiping about whoever wasn't there, I knew exactly how the child got that way. Be a good example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the helpful comments. My daughter and I have a good relationship, and we’ve talked about my concerns. She doesn’t see herself as mean or superficial, but I can tell she’s reflecting on past behavior that may have come across as dismissive or lacking empathy rather than intentionally unkind.
She’s said that some friends need more emotional engagement and validation than feels natural to her, though I still encourage her to consider others’ perspectives.
I also recognize that I’ve contributed to the issue by rarely saying no and giving her too much materially. While we’re comfortable, we’re not wealthy, and I think I overcompensate because I grew up with very little as the child of a single mother. My husband doesn’t share my concerns. -OP
The bolded sounds like she coming up with increasingly sophisticated rationalizations for nastiness. It’s all wrapped up in a bow to be handed to adults, as opposed to “I don’t want to hang with Jane anymore” “Jill and I have nothing in common and she’s a jerk” etc. Your husband is also parenting her and you’ve noted that he thinks everything is great. You both created this.
I’m not the original poster but perhaps YOU need a primer on empathy? She’s not asking how did we get here she’s asking for ideas on how to make a change.
OP, you’ve received some good ideas here and I’m a third recomendation for the book. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:She’s said that some friends need more emotional engagement and validation than feels natural to her, though I still encourage her to consider others’ perspectives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the helpful comments. My daughter and I have a good relationship, and we’ve talked about my concerns. She doesn’t see herself as mean or superficial, but I can tell she’s reflecting on past behavior that may have come across as dismissive or lacking empathy rather than intentionally unkind.
She’s said that some friends need more emotional engagement and validation than feels natural to her, though I still encourage her to consider others’ perspectives.
I also recognize that I’ve contributed to the issue by rarely saying no and giving her too much materially. While we’re comfortable, we’re not wealthy, and I think I overcompensate because I grew up with very little as the child of a single mother. My husband doesn’t share my concerns. -OP
The bolded sounds like she coming up with increasingly sophisticated rationalizations for nastiness. It’s all wrapped up in a bow to be handed to adults, as opposed to “I don’t want to hang with Jane anymore” “Jill and I have nothing in common and she’s a jerk” etc. Your husband is also parenting her and you’ve noted that he thinks everything is great. You both created this.
Anonymous wrote:Materialism and lack of empathy aren’t the same. I agree that you shouldn’t give her everything she wants - but in order to build empathy, talk with her frequently about how OTHER people might be feeling. Have her do meaningful community service. When you hear her being unkind, call her out immediately. Ask how her friends are doing and listen for signs of empathy/non-empathy and catch it in the moment. Talk about nuanced topics without a clear right or wrong, where both sides have good points, and have her articulate different points of view.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the helpful comments. My daughter and I have a good relationship, and we’ve talked about my concerns. She doesn’t see herself as mean or superficial, but I can tell she’s reflecting on past behavior that may have come across as dismissive or lacking empathy rather than intentionally unkind.
She’s said that some friends need more emotional engagement and validation than feels natural to her, though I still encourage her to consider others’ perspectives.
I also recognize that I’ve contributed to the issue by rarely saying no and giving her too much materially. While we’re comfortable, we’re not wealthy, and I think I overcompensate because I grew up with very little as the child of a single mother. My husband doesn’t share my concerns. -OP