Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm not inclined to contact the school or the other kid's parents to discuss, in part because she is afraid of getting into trouble for hurting him and in part because I figure it's her business and she seems to have handled it her own way. However, she still has the boy in several of her classes and she says he still watches her uncomfortably all the time, which makes me a bit nervous.
I would get the school involved, because the incident happened at school, AND she is going to be uncomfortable around him at school. She acted in self-defense, and you should make clear that you have her back on that point.
This, but you have to get her on board too or she may "pull her punches" next time and be scared to defend herself. And if there is not a next time with this boy or in HS, there may be a next time in college, or at a job, or....
I get that she is scared friends will find out, teachers will find out. I would approach this with school with some care but yes, I would start with the counselor and say that you need to talk in confidence.
OP, please listen to the above poster who said you and she both really, really need to TALK about this and think hard about why you both seem to feel guilty for her defending yourself. I know you came back later and said you were proud of her, but then you talked about how you felt violence was a last resort and how you were concerned that her reactions be more "measured" in the future. That is very worrying.
Talking that way to her will very likely make her feel even more that she did something wrong and she will internalize the message --
whether you mean it or not, whether you use these words or not -- that she shouldn't have punched someone who was forcing himself on her. And yes, he WAS forcing himself on her. Please don't let her think that "just a kiss" is OK if she does not want it, or that she should not use a punch to the nose if that's what her instinct tells her to do. Being held against a wall is not a time to measure your response.
Your daughter needs to take a women's self-defense class ASAP because there, someone who is NOT mom or dad or a friend will tell her point-blank that she must defend herself physically, and she will practice physical techniques for defense and flight. I would find her a class (some are one-time seminars, we're not talking about weeks and weeks of class here) immediately. See if she has friends who want to go as a group. If I were you I would take it separately but not with her, because your presence might make her feel she needs to be a good kid and not violent.
Make sure it's a real, hands-on class that teaches actual techniques and has the girls and women DOING them to a person who is pretending to come after them. Some classes, Iv'e found, are really just seminars or talk about bullying when what you want is the kinds of hands-on anti-rape class that is often taught by local police departments for the community. She needs to be in a place where she is hearing that it is not only OK but essential to use her body against someone else. Start by calling your local police and if they don't teach them they may know who does. Search online and at your community centers or recreation department.
I totally understand your worry about your child breaking someone's nose but truly, speaking here as a mom of a HS daughter, this is a HUGE learning opportunity you do not want to miss. Jump on it. And the lesson is not "measure your response" but "never tolerate anyone doing that to you." I hope you'll come back and say you've gotten her into a self-defense seminar and also that you and she (and her dad) have had a talk about how this wasn't "teen violence" -- it was self-defense.