Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel out of my depth with teen DD?

135 replies

ChrisReaPoppedAnEggInMyBath · 20/09/2025 14:02

I type this from officially the end of my tether and when I say I'm desperate for advice, I mean I'm DESPERATE and would welcome thoughts and suggestions before I completely lose my mind/marbles/will to live.

My DD is a glorious creature and I adore the bones of her, but I'm questioning everything from our parenting style and our ability to do right by her and for her (and her sister, which is a whole other story) and I suspect I need some tough love from MN as I can't see the wood for the trees.

DD is 13 and has ADHD which manifests itself with Demand Avoidance and Rejection Sensitivity Disphoria, which means that her setting is that everyone and everything is against her. Growing up, she has experienced a lot of teasing, bullying and comments about her height (she's always been the smallest in her year by some way) and this has shaped her attitude and response to life. She regards any comment as a potential attack on her (when they very rarely are) and while she seems feisty and brave, she's actually the very opposite.

Recently we moved her school - for countless reasons but also in response to her request as she'd had a tough time over the past couple of years and we all agreed a fresh start would be good, and she was on board with this. She saw all the benefits of the move, and seemed to understand the reality of the move and that it would take time to settle in and become familiar. She was nervous, but was brilliant in tackling it head on - we've told her countless times how impressed we are and how proud of her.

She's now been in her new school for a couple of weeks and despite coming out smiling and with lots of positive chat (and really positive feedback from the teachers) and new friendships forming, she's now decided that she hates it and, having been off a few days with a horrible bug, she's said she won't be going back on Monday.

She initially said she wanted to go back to her old school, but is now campaigning to be homeschooled with online classes as she says, the education system is failing and it's not right for her. She's sent me case studies and links to back up why online learning is better for her.

This is all repeated behaviour. She rejects or reacts against things in a heartbeat, and it can be anything from a particular meal, outfit or TV programme to a holiday destination, activity, friendship or in this case, school. It's like she has to have something to lash out at or fight against. She goes to the immediate big reaction (I HATE IT) but then it's so hard to move her from that viewpoint. She can't (not won't) see any other perspective or the bigger picture, it's like the shutters have come down.

We've asked what she'd like to change about school ('all of it'), what doesn't she like ('all of it'), what's good about it ('none of it'), and what in particular makes her so unhappy ('the environment'), but we see her when she comes out and she's genuinely OK. We appreciate it's not going to feel familiar and safe yet, but she's just not wanting to give it time - preferring to stay away and not engage with it.

What doesn't help is that she won't talk face to face, so to go deeper, we have to converse by message. She won't talk, she doesn't want to talk to a counsellor or a therapist, and instead she focusses on something new/different which will solve all the problems.

I'm really struggling to know what to do. Our parenting style has always been to work with the kids, not just tell them what's what, but I don't think this is actually always the right thing. In my research it says kids with Demand Avoidance need to have choices and control, but how when it's something as critical as school? And, in life, we don't always have choice or control, we have to ride the waves and be brave and do things we don't want to do.

The fact is she's not given it a chance to become familiar and great, she's given it a few days and made her mind up, and this isn't how you can go through life.
We've tried all different approaches - gentle encouragement, telling her how proud we are of her, cheering her in and celebrating wins, getting cross and telling her she HAS to go. In desperation to try something different I even shouted and said how she would be going in, school wasn't optional, and that I would pick her up and carry her in if it came to it. Not my finest parenting but I was desperate to try and get through to her, and she then told me all the ways in which I don't understand her, or even try to, and how I judge her and it makes her feel worse.

We've always tried to be her biggest champion, but I can't help but feel we're continually going wrong. Any ideas or suggestions for what to do next?

OP posts:
ThePure · 22/09/2025 14:29

Also they were a great reason NOT to get a dog or a cat for the two years we had them!

Fruitlips · 22/09/2025 14:40

ThePure · 22/09/2025 14:29

Also they were a great reason NOT to get a dog or a cat for the two years we had them!

Getting a dog was possibly the best decision I ever made. No matter the mood, the weather, the anything….. if I say the dog is desperate for a walk, my teens will head out. And they always return in a better mood! Poor dog gets far far too much exercise during school holidays but SO worth it

ThePure · 22/09/2025 14:58

My DD will walk our dog (that she campaigned long and hard for to the point of PowerPoint presentations) and I do agree that it is great for her mentally and physically but still a lot of the walking, feeding, grooming, vet, holiday care etc for said dog falls on me. I do love him but the hammies were easier.

Fruitlips · 22/09/2025 15:03

ThePure · 22/09/2025 14:58

My DD will walk our dog (that she campaigned long and hard for to the point of PowerPoint presentations) and I do agree that it is great for her mentally and physically but still a lot of the walking, feeding, grooming, vet, holiday care etc for said dog falls on me. I do love him but the hammies were easier.

Oh my teens do all the feeding
food I just buy online
holiday care…. To my ex husband 😆
grooming…, my DD and then 2x a year I splurge £50 a pop on a professional
walking…. I love walking so it’s a joy, and then teens do all over weekend, and then dog walker 2x a week.

So for us… it has been the BEST way to get my teens off phones and on walks. Also, I manage to coax my ds with my sometimes and…. We talk, like properly talk! I try to play it cool but inside i am dancing

Blazercup · 22/09/2025 16:19

That sounds like a really positive success
(And I predict you’ll be cleaning out a hamster by half term!)

ChrisReaPoppedAnEggInMyBath · 22/09/2025 18:13

It feels like we're already part home, part farm as we have dogs and cats already, but as she says, they're family pets where as a hamster/s would be hers, and actually I'm warming to the idea of her having a little pal and something she needs to be responsible for.

She didn't have a great day today, but I'm hoping I can get her in again tomorrow, and we'll see if we can keep on trucking. She has however called me several times from her walk to Pets At Home where she's squeaking with excitement looking at snoozing hamsters. Apparently she has leaflets.

And yes, I'll still look into medication. I've never been anti meds, far from it, as my daughter and I are both on ADHD meds and I actually think mine saved my life. For DD2, she didn't seem to need any kind of intervention, but now things are different, we'll explore different things. Even hamsters.

OP posts:
Fruitlips · 22/09/2025 18:34

ChrisReaPoppedAnEggInMyBath · 22/09/2025 18:13

It feels like we're already part home, part farm as we have dogs and cats already, but as she says, they're family pets where as a hamster/s would be hers, and actually I'm warming to the idea of her having a little pal and something she needs to be responsible for.

She didn't have a great day today, but I'm hoping I can get her in again tomorrow, and we'll see if we can keep on trucking. She has however called me several times from her walk to Pets At Home where she's squeaking with excitement looking at snoozing hamsters. Apparently she has leaflets.

And yes, I'll still look into medication. I've never been anti meds, far from it, as my daughter and I are both on ADHD meds and I actually think mine saved my life. For DD2, she didn't seem to need any kind of intervention, but now things are different, we'll explore different things. Even hamsters.

This now blind focus on the hamster is very much an adhd trait.

and will possibly / likely lose interest fairly shortly afterwards

ChrisReaPoppedAnEggInMyBath · 22/09/2025 18:37

Yep! A little like her need for a wristwatch for school as phones are handed in... she's worn it once. And like the 'essential' face wash, body mist, particular pillowcase, type of crisp, series of books...

OP posts:
Fruitlips · 22/09/2025 18:49

ChrisReaPoppedAnEggInMyBath · 22/09/2025 18:37

Yep! A little like her need for a wristwatch for school as phones are handed in... she's worn it once. And like the 'essential' face wash, body mist, particular pillowcase, type of crisp, series of books...

It’s like my son.

When they channel that laser focus, formidable

ThePure · 22/09/2025 19:41

With a hamster though a) they do not actually care if their owner loses interest unlike cats and dogs or even rats and b) they don’t require too much care when you eventually wind up doing it anyway. If you are going to get inveigled into a pet there are worse ones

New posts on this thread. Refresh page