Anonymous wrote:DD told us she is Bi a few months ago. She is 17 and had dated one boy for a few months a year ago. She is now seeing an 18 y.o. female. She doesn't share much with us and is very closed- is keeping to herself at home. She hasn't been very social over the last year, very seldom does anything with friends, no dances, no sports or school activities. She has had some CBT for therapy for anxiety. She seems a bit flat. I'm worried about her isolating herself and told her that if she's interested in talking to someone, I could schedule a therapy session. She found it offensive that I asked because it insinuates that she has a problem because she's bi. I have no idea what the best approach is- I just want her to be healthy/happy. I imagine life is confusing for her right now. Any advice?
I think the people responding to you are being really mean. Sorry about that.
It sounds as if you're worried about apparent social anxiety problems. The bi part is relevant because the daughter is using that to deflect attention from the isolation.
Maybe find a church or group for parents with LGBTQI kids, or, say, a volunteer group that helps LGBTQI kids with parents who kick them out, and go to meetings for that? Maybe going to the meetings with your daughter would be a way to get her out of the house.
If you join a volunteer group, maybe that would also give your daughter something to put on resumes and job applications.