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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To send my daughter to boarding school?

188 replies

Salouport · 03/03/2018 12:42

I feel sick....and please be gentle as I don’t know where to turn and I haven’t eaten for days out of worry.
My daughter is the eldest of four. She along with her brother is from my first marriage, and I had another two children when I remarried. My dd1 has always had good contact with her dad, who is in a solid relationship with a lovely lady who has no children. DD1 also has a fairly good relationship with step dad, although in her view, we are probably more “strict” than she would like. She is in her first year of 6th form and is doing very well academically. She also competes at a national level in sport (won’t say which one as it might “out” me.)
She has always had a problem with telling a “tall story” and lying in order to get out of trouble. Things such as lying about her whereabouts, or why was late home etc. Obviously I know that lots of teenagers do this, and it is a part of growing up. She is a bit of a drama queen, and has managed to make several “storm in a tea-cup” type situations over the past couple of years. She is fairly good at making new friends and maintaining her friendships. She thrives on new experiences.
The problem is that she got a job when she turned 16, and through that she has been introduced to a crowd of people, and in particular a boy, who have encouraged her to make some really silly decisions. She has been caught lying to get her own way (like saying she is studying at a friends house, when in fact she has been working a late night shift...we want to follow the school’s guidelines roughly about the number of hours a week a sixth former works, as ultimately, her education is the most important thing, and she is very keen to go to uni). Again, this has caused an argument, but nothing more than I guess being held across most households with 16 year old girls.
The boy comes from a very unstable background and lives at home with no boundaries whatsoever. Dd loves spending time there, and gets on with his family, including his sister who is about 20. There are lots of siblings in the house, many of whom dont work, but have children...it’s all just chaotic.
A few months ago, Dd dropped a grade and I was asked to the school to discuss, which I did. I was asked about changes at home, which there wasn’t, but I mentioned the boyfriend and discovered he was an ex pupil. I was basically told that the teachers felt that he would not be a good influence on her, due to the unmotivated and chaotic lifestyle the family have. I discussed this with Dd, but I respect her decisions to chose her own friends, and I think that it’s good to mix with a variety of types of people.
Strange things continue to happen, such as the boyfriend sleeping in his car outside the house all night, and him continually trying to get her to move in with him....
A few weeks ago the boyfriend had a couple of “seizures” at work. No previous history of things like that. He was blue lighted to hospital on both occasions, but nothing has shown up on any tests yet. I strongly suspect that these seizures were faked, due to the timings of them (both at the start of dd’s half term / end of term), so I think he had thoughts of her spending time with him, and he also wanted to “test” to see if she would accompany him to hospital. He is very needy.
After these episodes, we spoke to Dd about not travelling in his car, as he would not be insured until the reasons for his seizures have been fully investigated. She promised she wouldn’t.
Last Sunday, she was caught by chance getting into his car, by her step father. He sent him on his way and sent Dd into the house. I decided to drive to the boyfriends house to try to explain our reasons. I have been driving the pair of them about myself, and driving Dd to his house, and she’s got the bus on occasion, so this was not a way of getting them to stop seeing each other.
Once I arrived at the house, I had barely started talking and I was being called by my husband to return home immediately. The boyfriend and one of his sisters were standing in the street outside our home screaming that our Dd was being held against her will, they were concerned for her safety and the police had been called. He then calls again, saying that they were shouting out that my husband had abused my daughter.....
I get home, husband had managed to get rid of them, and they were sitting having a calm conversation. The abuse thing was an utter lie, which Dd had confided into the sister in. The only truthful aspect of it was when she asked my husband if her backside looked big in some leggings she wore, he commented that it looked big. I KNOW this was an inappropriate response, it was several months ago, and it does not constitute sexual abuse. The police came round, we’re surprised to see us having a calm chat, rather than having her tied up somewhere. They told us the family were “known” and they had a fondness for calling ambulances and the police on a regular basis. Part of the conversation involved moving forward, and it was agreed that Dd should go and spend time with her dad.
After the police had gone, my husband broke down and sobbed. He was distraught that the girl he has loved and bought up from 4 could make these allegations, and probably did so in order to get her own way. She was told she was loved, but all need some time.
She has now been with her dad for a week. It’s been the worst week of both our lives. He has a job which means he is away 3-4 nights a week, and his girlfriend, although lovely, is not sure she can deal with my Dd. It is an hour bus ride to school (but her dad has been driving her in) but she feels isolated from her friends. I am not too bothered about the fact that she’s had a miserable week, she made up a malicious sexual abuse allegation, for which she needs to see the consequences of.
There is no way she can return home here for a while. The police, her school, and social services (who closed the case after a five minute call) all agree that she needs to be away from her step dad for a period of time.
We are therefore stuck. Obviously she wants to live with the boyfriend which won’t happen, and even she recognises that it would not be good in the long run. She has managed to alienate a lot of her friends due to attention seeking behaviour since being with the boy, so she can’t stay with them.
My brother works in an international boarding school in Denmark, and has offered to proxy-parent her if she were to attend. I’ve mentioned the prospect to her and she seems keen. She loves new experiences, and she feels that she could “start afresh”. Although she would “lose” her first year of A levels, she would instead study the IB, an alternative, which would in fact open more doors for her. Family travel to Denmark often, and we live very close to an airport with cheap flights, so she could return home twice monthly if she wanted to.
I just don’t know what to do? She’s a lovely girl, whom I tell daily that I love, but she has lost her way. Strangely, it does not seem to bother her being away from the boyfriend in order to go to Denmark, but she desperately does not want to change schools to one nearer her dad.
Thank you for reading. I feel utterly utterly shit.

OP posts:
Confusedbeetle · 03/03/2018 13:39

As others have said, if she is keen, and knows its not to get rid of her , let her go. She may be out of her depth with this boy and looking for a way out. If she was in love she would refuse to go

AcrossthePond55 · 03/03/2018 13:41

If she wants to go I'd get her there as soon as possible before she has a chance to be influenced by this boy or to second think her decision.

Sounds like a great opportunity.

crikeycrumbsblimey · 03/03/2018 13:41

She is 16 and wants to start making her own decisions - you are giving her better options to choose between.
Fantastic opportunity!

Crispbutty · 03/03/2018 13:42

I agree that it sounds like she wants to get away from the boyfriend and the pressure he is putting on her and this is the ideal opportunity and makes it a lot easier for her. Let her go. It will probably be the best thing for her right now.

Trailedanderror · 03/03/2018 13:43

The fact that she's not dismissed the idea suggests that she's in too deep with the boyfriend and that this is a good, 'not losing face' way to get away from him and is a good solution.

youarenotkiddingme · 03/03/2018 13:44

It sounds like she knows she's trapped by bc family and sees a way out which includes bettering her uni chances.

I'd let her go. It's. It against her will.

What I would do though is agree a sat of rules with you her and uncle before sets off. She needs to know this chance is born out of love - but she has a role to play in it.

Secretsquirrel252 · 03/03/2018 13:45

I would try to get her to have a contraceptive implant. Her decision making isn't great at the moment and it would be a shame if anything got in the way of her chance for a fresh start.

TheletterZ · 03/03/2018 13:45

I'm also thinking going is good. If it is a boarding school then the students have a lot of supervision, which they seem to accept from school a lot more than from parents. Plus this is a fresh start with no loss of face, which is very inportant.

One question, will she go straight away and go into the year below or wait until September to start her IB course? Given everything you've described I would stay go sooner rather than wait.

NC4Now · 03/03/2018 13:46

Sounds like a good idea and likely to have the best outcome for her.

macbethh · 03/03/2018 13:46

ThanksThanks

VioletCharlotte · 03/03/2018 13:47

If she's keen, then I would most definitely say yes!

I know (from first hand experience) what it's like to be a young woman and get involved with someone like this. If she stays, the likelihood is she'll drop out of college, move in with him and get pregnant.

It needs to be her decision though, if she feels she's being pushed, she'll run the other way.

So sorry you're going through this.

ReadyPlayer1 · 03/03/2018 13:50

This sounds like a great opportunity for her given that she is keen. I would suggest getting her a clean bill of health first and foremost though; she may not have gotten pregnant, but if she's had unprotected sex or a contraceptive error then she really ought to get checked and treated for any potential STDs.

Bunbunbunny · 03/03/2018 13:58

Has she actually apologised or realised the impact of her lies ? Really feel for you OP and your DH. I’d be buying that ticket ASAP and getting her away from it all and get her some therapy, sorry the lies to that extent police are called out is way above teenage pranks.

RandomMess · 03/03/2018 13:59

As your DD is keen absolutely go for it Thanks

restofthetimes · 03/03/2018 14:05

This happened to me, not a school in Denmark, but quite far away. I was a year younger though.
Although I said I wanted to go, when I got there, boarding school wasn't what I imagined and there were lots of freedoms taken away from me - having been used to staying out all night, we had to be back in from a weekend night out by 10pm, that sort of thing.
I stayed for a month I think, and then told my parents i was leaving. There's nothing the school can do then.
My advise would be to properly check out the school in Denmark and make sure she's happy with what her life would look like for the next two years.

LakieLady · 03/03/2018 14:08

It sounds as though it's just what your daughter needs, OP. I wish I'd had that opportunity when I had a controlling and needy boyfriend at her age.

Aprilmightmemynewname · 03/03/2018 14:09

Is she wants to go then it's because she wants a fresh start without losing face to her bf. I would be asking to see the negative test first though!!
My ds was in massive trouble 2 years ago at 14. Df (Disney father) made no attempt to sort him out and at 40 miles away I was limited when he wouldn't see me. Roll on a year and he moved ft with me and nc with df and his old friends. A fresh start was what he needed. Sounds like your dd will flourish without the negative distractions.

JoJoSM2 · 03/03/2018 14:12

She'd be on the plane tomorrow if it was up to me :) I think it'll be great for her personal situation and she'll have a blast. I went to study abroad at that age (and did IB as well). I'd say I 'played by the rules' a lot more than I did at home and it can be a nice bit of breathing space if the home environment gets a bit intense.

Hopefully, she's likely to make more sensible friends in Denmark + the IB is very intense, 6 A-levels + a lot of other essential stuff to cover to pass so there's little time for mischief outside of studying and sleeping.

TonTonMacoute · 03/03/2018 14:13

In the circumstances you describe, yes I would. It sounds like a very good option!

Inkspellme · 03/03/2018 14:14

My dd went to boarding school from age 15 to 18. It was by her request and she came home most weekends. She made very close friendships and loved going there. If your dd wants to go then view it as an opportunity for her to experience a different educational opportunity and give it a shot. I too think it will give her a chance to break the relationship without losing face.

One of the big positives I found was that the school assumed everyone was going to plan a career and helped them do so. So if your dd is keen on uni she’s likely to be surrounded by others who also are.

You will get people judging you for sending her. I got judged plenty. I ignored it as my dd was happy and it was no one else’s concern how I chose my dds education.

Cloudylemons · 03/03/2018 14:19

I think if she sounds keen, she is already looking for a way to leave the boyfriend and his family, so it’ll be the best thing for her, even if as a pp has said, the school is more strict than she’s used to. It could turn her life around before it’s too late. Good luck with it all op Flowers

gwendolenfairfax · 03/03/2018 14:22

I would send her too
Sorry that you're going through this.

DarthArts · 03/03/2018 14:24

I think you are lucky to have this as an option tbh.

She's definitely gone well past typical "teenage" behaviour and she's actually very lucky that her actions haven't had more serious implications.

As it is she's undoubtedly going to have to put a lot of work into repairing her relationship with your DH and it's understandable that he's going to be very upset/distressed by her lies.

The opportunity to get her away from her BF is one I would grasp firmly. It's not about sending her "away" it's about providing everyone with some space to process what's happened and an opportunity for a fresh start - especially for her.

Like pp's have said, the fact she wants to go suggests that this event may have been a catalyst for her starting to realise the negative impact this relationship is having on her. Even if she's not quite ready to admit that outright, being willing to move is a big indication that she's less invested in the BF than she was and this gives her an "out" without losing face.

I'd just make sure that you focus on planning regular visits and contact time and impress on her the opportunity rather than imply it's a punishment.

That said I don't think you can or should minimise what she's done and I'd be reinforcing that she needs to do some serious self reflection - I'd ideally look at seeing if some counselling was available to facilitate this.

SockMobster · 03/03/2018 14:25

If he’s still driving report him to the DVLA - nobody should drive for a year after a seizure even if tests come back normal (as they often do).

SockMobster · 03/03/2018 14:26

Sorry I only read to that bit, now the reading!