Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
Did you read nothing else of the post? Do you really think the possibility she's just being dramatic outweighs the possibility that she's being/is at risk of being sexually abused?
I would think that if her issue was with her stepfather. She told DH that she likes him, but she thinks her mom has changed since she married him. Her issue is with her mom, not the stepdad.
Anonymous wrote:I wish someone had welcomed me into their home when my first stepfather was sexually abusing me.
I also wish someone would have welcomed me into their home when the son of my second stepfather, who already had a conviction for sexual assault, was abusing me. Instead, I was blamed for being “provacative”. I was 12 at the time, and who knows.. I may have been provocative as I was being abused by my stepfather as young as 4. I don’t think I was - it was things that a normal 12 year old girl should be able to do in their own home, like wear pyjamas.
As it was, my mother was an alcoholic as well, and I raised my brothers until I left home at 17. And no one “heard” me.
I married young, mostly as an escape, and divorced young. He was a good man and I regret it. I then got in an abusive relationship for years, mostly because it was a known. I got out, and met my now DH. I cheated on him online.
It took me forever to realize it wasn’t me. A lot of therapy and time, and soul searching. But no one ever listened, and I didn’t expect them to ever care about me as an adult. The wreckage of life behind me is soul sinking, but I’m finally in a good place.
I wonder what would have happened had I been able to leave that home situation earlier?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
Did you read nothing else of the post? Do you really think the possibility she's just being dramatic outweighs the possibility that she's being/is at risk of being sexually abused?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is this girl OP?
12
No 12 year old girl asks to live with her stepmom over her mom unless there is something really, really wrong occurring at mom's house. With certainty, there is more going on in that house than her not being allowed to leave her room.
Do the right thing OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
How long has new step dad been in their lives?
How did mom meet him?
Anonymous wrote:If you say yes, and she is just being dramatic, then once the novelty wears off she will go back to staying with her mom.
If you say yes, and she stays with you through graduation, then most likely you saved her from something really unpleasant or worse.
If you say no, and she is just being dramatic, she will never forget being rejected by her dad when she really needed him. It will change her forever. She will also hate you forever, and blame you for saying no. Her relationship with her dad will never be the same.
If you say no because you think she is being dramatic, and there is actually something happening with stepdad or something happens down the road, you will destroy her. She, and possibly your husband, will resent you for this for as long as you are in their lives.
Say yes.
If you are correct, this will be temporary.
If you are not correct, you will be saving this girl from a lot of trauma.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.
When she’s at our house, she stays in her room on her cell phone. That’s why I feel that she’s being dramatic by saying they’re forcing her to stay in her room.
Anonymous wrote:You need to let her move in. This is a big decision for a kid, one that can be anxiety provoking because of the potential for angering the parent they want to be with less and for being rejected by the parent they want to be with more, so many/most kids won't make a request like this unless they feel like they really need it. Also, be careful about digging into her stated reason and saying no if it turns out she's choosing to stay in her room rather than being forced to. Even if her mother and stepfather aren't forcing her to stay in her room, there may be reasons why she feels safer staying in the room (e.g., even if the stepfather hasn't done anything to her, maybe her intuition is telling her something's not right with him and she needs to keep as far from him as she can).
Her safety needs to be priority number one.