Anonymous wrote:Guys this is obviously a troll
Anonymous wrote:My sister is you OP.
She has a 13-year-old DD that she hates with a passion. And boy does my neice know she's known since she was around five.
I am saying this with kindness, she did this to her child. She is the problem She refuses to understand all the situations that lead to her child hating her.
No one ever said parenting was easy and every child is different.
In my sisters case she wanted a petite cheerleader popular daughter, what she got was a daughter that looks exactly like her dad and has a personality like him or his family. A nerd a lovely funny smart loving nerd.
I am just letting you know you are not the only one feeling this way however you need help working through this you are the parent your child is a child.
This behavior was caused by you.
Anonymous wrote:
If you're OP, and you seem to be, why are you ignoring what SO MANY here have told you, which is that the first step in improving this situation with your DD is YOU getting therapy? Because until YOU understand what is likely going on, nothing you try is going to help the situation or her. And if you try to wash your hands of her and send her away, you will have truly failed her as a parent.
Why do you not comment at all on the most common advice you got here, which is start with YOU and therapy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean what's the end goal here OP? If it's to have a better relationship with your daughter then you BOTH need to put in the time/work. She's still a child. Her brain is still developing. Just because therapy didn't work before doesn't mean it wouldn't now. You both should be seeing therapists separately, then together once you're in the right frame of mind.
If you're "done" with the relationship then sure, shipping her off to a relative or boarding school would work. That is going to mess her up further though.
She was just in therapy this school year. Again. Went nowhere. We tried a few therapists, got neuropsych testing, it's just not moving the needle. At all. She was just screaming at me for hanging up her laundry. There's nothing I can do to avoid her rage. It's almost Every.Single.Interaction. To be more specific, these are times screams at me every day:
- Wake up
- Getting to school
- Sitting down to dinner - She demands eating alone in dining room. We must wait for her to finish eating before we can eat. We sound too annoying chewing and any talking is too irritating to her. Frankly, I'm tired of trying to eat while being screamed at the entire time. That's dinner time here every single day.
- If I need to put laundry in her room or ever enter
- Time to bathe before bed
- Bed time.
It's most of our interaction - her screaming at me. I'm trying to think of a type of interaction where she doesn't scream at me. . I guess when I put her food on the table and patiently wait for her to finish her meal so I can enter, or sometimes if we go to a store she really likes. For a long time, I couldn't take her to restaurants or parties because it was too embarrassing her screaming - and physically attacking me - in front of other parents. If I could afford boarding school, her bags would be packed yesterday.
Anonymous wrote:I mean what's the end goal here OP? If it's to have a better relationship with your daughter then you BOTH need to put in the time/work. She's still a child. Her brain is still developing. Just because therapy didn't work before doesn't mean it wouldn't now. You both should be seeing therapists separately, then together once you're in the right frame of mind.
If you're "done" with the relationship then sure, shipping her off to a relative or boarding school would work. That is going to mess her up further though.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have other children? If so, what is your relationship with them?
There are so many things that could be happening here. We can’t tell you what is wrong.
I’d start by calling your pediatrician and getting a referral for a family therapist. Then make and appointment. A good one will not have an opening for a while so go ahead and get on the list. Also get a referral for a child psychologist and get on that waitlist.
Your child might have some sort of personality disorder or you might or neither. We don’t know.
Until you get into therapy try to do one fun activity a week with your daughter- just the two of you. Something you both will like. Like a movie, bowling, ice skating. Something fun. Try not to talk about too much other than the activity you are doing.
Did anything happen when she was two? Did you have another child? Move? Go back to work?
Anonymous wrote:If your goal is having a healthy relationship with your daughter, you need some professional help to understand what is going on with her and your family dynamics.
Anonymous wrote:I am sorry op. This sounds hard. I'd recommend looking into boarding schools nearby together. Give her some choice and voice in the process and see where you land. Some kids just need a little more independence than others.