Anonymous wrote:stop doing everything for her. She can do her own hair, find her own clothes, make her own snacks.
Anonymous wrote:I think all the replies accusing OP of parentifying the daughter are way off base. OP says she "can " trust the daughter to babysit her younger siblings, not that she does it all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you're parentifying her. She's still a child, don't make her mother her siblings. Like when I run around with my kids... does that make me seem like a child who loves to play or just an overworked mom trying to entertain her kid?
Anonymous wrote:So when she supervises her siblings for hours at a time, do they not eat, snack or drink? I find that hard to believe.
Anonymous wrote:I was a lot like this. I hid my more childish interests and I did start to be a little more teenager ish by this age (interest in clothes, etc) but overall very similiar.
I was diagnosed as an adult with adhd which might make sense here. We tend to not have concurrent development - which explains why she’s mature in some ways but socially immature. I was a late bloomer and caught up in college where I did all the teenager things and dated etc.
There’s nothing you can do about it other than to work on the things that are parent issues. That would be the dependency piece. I would encourage learning to drive and a part time job as both of those will help with independence skills. You might also consider an assessment for neurodiversity as it does suck to get to adulthood and not know this about yourself
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take her to go see a therapist. This isn’t typical teenage behavior. It’s abnormal and odd. My cousin had a daughter like this. She was 15 and still played outside regularly and would climb into her parents bed at night. My cousin didn’t seek help for her daughter, and thought it was just a phase/sweet, and now her daughter is in her late 20s, and lives at home, and does nothing all day but eat, sleep, watch tv, play with stuffed animals.
Do you know how many parents wished their teenaged kids played outside?
Why? There’s a middle ground. It doesn’t have to be playing in the playground or drinking/partying.
In my neighborhood, there’s ton of high schoolers who play outside though. The youngest kids are in preK and eldest are in 11th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take her to go see a therapist. This isn’t typical teenage behavior. It’s abnormal and odd. My cousin had a daughter like this. She was 15 and still played outside regularly and would climb into her parents bed at night. My cousin didn’t seek help for her daughter, and thought it was just a phase/sweet, and now her daughter is in her late 20s, and lives at home, and does nothing all day but eat, sleep, watch tv, play with stuffed animals.
Do you know how many parents wished their teenaged kids played outside?