BabyTigger99
<font color=CC00cc>The most beautiful words in the
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2002
- Messages
- 2,789
Okay, so DH's 13 year old daughter moved up to our house 2 weeks ago. Things are slowly getting better, but here is my issue. Yesterday, I stopped home from work, talked with her a little bit about the day, she said it was okay, I asked about what she had for homework (which her mom would have never done), she told me, and asked if I would help her when I got home from teaching my dance classes. Everything was going fine. When I got home, she asked if we could go to the YMCA to work out first, which was fine, I had actually mentioned it to her during the day. So we talked the whole way there, and the whole while we were walking the track. Got home, I helped her with her homework (DH doesn't have the patience to help her, they both get frustrated with each other, so I am the one to help her now), and we were talking about school. She had decided that she was going to go to Homework Help afterschool, because I was having some problems helping her with her math (my way wasn't the right way). She and I also talked about her being on the Yearbook team, and she got really excited about doing it. Everything seemed to be going well.
Fast forward to an hour later. She had been on the phone with her old friends. All of a sudden, she had a bad attitude about her new school, she was not going to go for Homework Help, because only geeks do that, and she doesn't want to do yearbook, she doesn't need friends at our house, you can't make her do what she doesn't want to do.
When she isn't talking to her old friends, things are so much better. She has her own cell phone, which her mom got for her and pays for, so that is how she is talking to them. The poor attitude she displays is having a big effect on her little brother (DS is 7).
This morning she did say that she would fill out the paperwork to be on Yearbook. So she must have had a change of heart. I just am looking for some advice on how I can help her break away from her old friends, and look for some new opportunites at our house.
Fast forward to an hour later. She had been on the phone with her old friends. All of a sudden, she had a bad attitude about her new school, she was not going to go for Homework Help, because only geeks do that, and she doesn't want to do yearbook, she doesn't need friends at our house, you can't make her do what she doesn't want to do.
When she isn't talking to her old friends, things are so much better. She has her own cell phone, which her mom got for her and pays for, so that is how she is talking to them. The poor attitude she displays is having a big effect on her little brother (DS is 7).
This morning she did say that she would fill out the paperwork to be on Yearbook. So she must have had a change of heart. I just am looking for some advice on how I can help her break away from her old friends, and look for some new opportunites at our house.

I agree with the other posters that as she gets used to the new school and makes friends the old friends will become less important to her.