hambirg
<font color=blue>Has tooted quietly in church<font
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2003
- Messages
- 2,407
I was seventeen when I joined the army reserve. I spent three months living on base, being treated like an adult, with no one telling me how to spend my free time as long as I obeyed the curfew and did my job.
When I came home it was really hard to suddenly start behaving like a child again. My mother and I fought, until I abruptly moved out a few months later. I literally walked out the door after she freaked out because I'd spent the night over at a girlfriend's house "without permission" (I'd left a note abd a phone number for her by the front door, but that wasn't enough, apparently).
Seventeen is nearly adult, and a great age to start giving your daughter some adult responsibilities. As long as she's respecting the curfew, maintaining her grades and not coming home drunk, I think you should respect her desire to hang out with her friends. She'll be gone off to university in just a few months - this is a chance for you to supervise her transition into responsible adulthood.
And if she starts going out seven days a week, you can always negotiate a "family dinner night" or a "family game night". Ex. every Wednesday, she stays home reconnecting with the family.
I was 19 when I moved out of my parents' house. I had a September birthday and didn't graduate until I was 18. I stayed at home one year while I was in CC. My mom is a worrier, but I really didn't have "rules." She wanted to know where I would be and who I would be with. . ."in case you are dying in a ditch somewhere, I want to know when I should be worried to the point that I should call the police." I could respect that. But at some point you have to be independent.
I'm really shocked by some of the responses on here. I have always thought that, in the end, being a successful parent meant raising children that didn't need me anymore. I know that it is bittersweet. . .but it really is the end goal. When they are toddlers we do everything that encourages them to walk and talk. . .but when they are really ready to start asserting their independence we are suppose to reign it in?
That doesn't make any sense to me. OP, if she is successfully managing her life. . . and you don't expect that she is involved in anything she shouldn't be. . . than take great satisfaction in knowing that you have raised a great kid! Let her live her life and enjoy a great social life. Some parents have kids that don't have that. .. and would do anything in the world if their kids just HAD friends to hang out with. Be thankful that she is "normal."
(ALSO I had a friend that this really happened to. So I should not laugh about it. There is a grain of truth in there.)