disneychic2
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2010
- Messages
- 5,331
Oh, I'm NOT going to jump all over you for supposedly resenting your DSD. I do think you've been trying for years to do right by her, which was tough given the polar opposite parenting she's been experiencing. And I think your family runs very well, something that you are afraid will change with the addition of a 16 year old.
However, I do think that at 16, some of your rules are overboard (especially the one that they have to be asleep before you will sleep, that needs to go once kids get older). The reality is that in maybe two short years, she will be capable of being independent. How is she supposed to learn about making good decisions if she makes no decisions herself? I GET that your household runs a certain way, and that you want to maintain it until your biological kids graduate. But I think you, had you not brought DSD into your house, you would have amended your own rules sooner rather than later. I also think that you should do a bit of each. Relax some with the understanding that they will be tightened if taken advantage of, and keep others with the understanding that they can be loosened.
Here's a wonderful list I recently read, written by Wendy Mogel. Yes, they are based on Jewish teachings, but they are wonderful. Especially #1.
1 . Teenagers need to make dumb mistakes to get smart.
2 . Be ALERT but not ALARMED.
3 . Be compassionate and concerned but not enmeshed.
4 . Love them but do not worship them like idols or despise them when they let you down.
5 . Be observant without spying or prying.
6 . Pretend you have seven kids: Dopey, Bashful, Sleepy, Grumpy, Doc (the know it all), Sneezy (Does he have a learning disability? An undiagnosed handicap of some kind?), Happy (Is he too laid back? Where is his passion, focus, ambition and drive?) and that which ever of these seven appear in your childs form on any given day, they are all just going through a phase
7 . When they come to you in distress, resist responding like a concierge, talent agent or the secret police. Assume that they are capable of figuring out through trial and error how to solve their own problems.
8 . Be forewarned that the college Common Application asks about paid employment with the word paid in bold. Remind yourself that ordinary chores and nonfancy paid jobs provide a great education in ordinary but vital life skills.
9 . Remind yourself that watching dumb YouTube videos is a healthful form of decompression and entertainment for teenagers.
10 .Remind yourself that they are unlikely to fulfill all of your dreams or all of your nightmares.
11. Remember that a snapshot of your teenager today is not the epic movie of her life.
12. Recognize that once they get to college, FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) laws dont allow parents to see their childs grades so its a good idea for students to learn the relationship between effort and outcome long before they go.
13. Plan parental obsolescence, raise them to leave you. The Talmud requires that parents teach their child how to swim.
14. Put the oxygen mask on yourself before you put it on your child.
15. Find support in other adults instead of letting shame or fear about your teenagers twisting path cause you to isolate yourself.
Wow!


