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Teenagers

Parenting teenagers has its ups and downs. Get advice from Mumsnetters here.

Feel so disgusted and shocked at DS - just don't want to look him in the face.

292 replies

StifflersMom · 13/06/2007 15:32

DS is 14 - soon to be fifteen. I knew he had a bit of an on/off "thing" with a girl at school but was reasonably confident that nothing much had happened. He doesn't really get much opportunity to socialise outside of school as he is very involved with a particular sport and he also goes to school in a different town to where we live but occasionally, eg in half terms, he will make arrangements to go off on his own with his school friends for the day.

First let me say I am not a prudish mother, I do not vehemently disapprove of him having girlfriends and a bit of snogging etc as to what I personally feel is appropriate for a teenager of his age. I even feel glad that he is "fancied" and seems popular.

DS and I have not been getting on lately. I catch him out in lies and he has been giving DH and I a lot of attitude which I realise is all in keeping with the normal stuff parents of teens have to go through. However, its been worse lately; he's been rebelling big time over a treatment regime he has to follow for a medical condition and yesterday, in complete exasperation and anger I told him I didn't want to speak to him for the rest of the day because I couldn't bear being spoken to with so little respect and apparent dislike.

When he was in bed and I was putting stuff away in his room I came across his phone and took it out and looked at it. I am not going to get into a debate about the rights and wrongs of that; I don't do it as rule and I realise that even 14 year olds deserve some privacy but I reserve the right to check out what it going on in his life in whatever way I can when I have concerns and we are not communicating well. He is after all, still a child.

I was shocked and horrified by what I found. Texts sent to this on/off girlfriend; REAL adult content, I mean really pornographic descriptions (again I must stress that I am not prudish about such things but I think there is a time for this and it is not at 14 years of age.) It described what he wanted to do to her in explicit detail and in words I really can't imagine him using. (I realise I am denial here, with the last statement, but sorry I just can't take that on board, that he would speak like that and then actively TELL her these things!)

I also found a short porno film, again full hardcore content but with all the sounds and close ups.

I hauled him out of bed, admitted I had looked at his phone and at what I had found. The colour drained out of his face immediately. He attempted a couple of different stories until I insisted that nothing other than the truth would suffice. He said his mates had got hold of his phone some days before he had sent the text and eventually he had sent it to her. But that they weren't his words.

I asked him if he had had sex. He denied it. I asked him if he was aware that having sex with a girl under 16 was a crime, that he (or WE!) could be prosectuted and that HE would be the only one really deemed to be in the wrong, as the male. He said yes but that he wasn't having sex.

I then cried (pathetically) and said I was disgusted and that I couldn't beleive he was either doing this stuff, or at the very least promising to by text, at 14. That 14 is very different to 16, 17 or 18 and that there will be a time in a few years when it really isn't my business but for now it is.

He was so stressed he threw up. Normally this would have appalled me; to upset him that much but it had no effect pn my last night. I just felt disgust and still do today.

He'll be home from school at 5.30 and I don't know how to deal with him. I couldn't speak to him this morning and I don't want to now or even look him in the face.

Biggest point here is I don't know what is/isn't the truth, what he is/isn't up to. He says it's only kissing and cuddling but would YOU believe that after a text like that? (You'll have to use your imagine; I can't bring myself say what it said but it involved much use of the word "pssy", fck, cock and tit w*nk, and what he wanted to do "all over her." ) (At 14 years old!!)

I am aware I may possibly be over reacting. But I can't help the way I feel. Please tell me what you think about how I should handle this.

By the way, DH was there and fully backed me up but I do feel that this is much less of a "big deal" for him. A "bloke thing" obviously.

OP posts:
Enid · 14/06/2007 12:08

I expect he threw up because he was totally and utterly embarrassed!

Rhubarb · 14/06/2007 12:09

BTW I totally agree with Custy re: privacy. Whilst your kids are still kids it is important to keep them safe. I remember arranging with 2 guys I spoke to over the phone whilst working in tele-sales to come to my mums house for a party we were having whilst she was away. They were going to get the train from wherever it was they lived. In all naivety I asked them where they would sleep and they just laughed and said they'd find somewhere. I was 17!

Luckily for me they didn't turn up.

You have to protect them and if that means invading their privacy from time to time then so be it. Safety is much more important and just because they use grown up words and seem sensible, doesn't mean they are any less naive.

DaddyJ · 14/06/2007 12:09

StifflersMom, I am glad the teenage boy perspective (yes, I remember it well..) was helpful.

What you went through reminds me of my negative reaction the first time
my sister told me about a 'love interest'.

There is a big age gap between us - when I was a student she was
a teen - but we have always been very close and as much as
I am the Protective Older Brother we talk freely about everything
including sex.

But that first time when she confided in me about this guy,
I just lost the plot..started making snide, cutting comments
about him and basically cut the conversation short.

I was furious with myself afterwards, I just could not believe
I had acted that way and I was really scared that I had destroyed something
truly special.

If I had come on Mumsnet with this I would have probably been shot to shit.

And quite frankly I would have reacted same as you, Stifflers.
'Oi! BACK the feck OFF!'
I know the textbook, I know I could have reacted differently
but emotionally I could not.

Are we not allowed to have emotions as mothers/older brothers?

Just like in your case there was a happy ending, though.

Fortunately, my sis was only surprised at my reaction so
next time we talked I was my calm, supportive self which
also allowed me to get my concerns across.

Rhubarb · 14/06/2007 12:10

StifflersMom - hugs?

kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:10

I think your reaction was awful tbh.

'hauled him out of bed'

'said i was disgusted'

I feel really sorry for him,

you say "He'll be home from school at 5.30 and I don't know how to deal with him. I couldn't speak to him this morning and I don't want to now or even look him in the face"

how the hell do you think HE feels having to face you!

StifflersMom · 14/06/2007 12:11

Probably Enid. Shock and embarassment I am sure. The launguage in that text was not, I imagine, anything he ever wanted ME or DH to see. I take total responsibility for how I found it, but will not feel bad for wanting to address the situation.

Thank you for the support, others also.

OP posts:
kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:11

Im NOT saying what he is doing is acceptable - but neither is the way you handled it!

StifflersMom · 14/06/2007 12:13

Kittylette I have to say that I can't consider your comments. You don't, in this occasion, know what you are talking about.

I did not physically "haul" him. It was a figure of speech. His bed is higher than my head for a start! I gently woke him and asked him to come downstairs.

No I could not look him in the face yesterday morning. Greater parenting "crimes" are commited every day I'm sure.

OP posts:
TheDaVinciCod · 14/06/2007 12:14

hmm haev mailed

kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:15

well how am i supposed to know you gently woke him,

when you type

i hauled him out of bed

hardly the smae thing is it?

TheDaVinciCod · 14/06/2007 12:15

ah givez una breakez

StifflersMom · 14/06/2007 12:17

It's in the thread Kitty. If you want criticise, at least read it before you do.

OP posts:
BrothelSprouts · 14/06/2007 12:18

I thought StifflersMom had already explained all this?
I admire her sticking power.
She's dealt with the aftermath of this situation really well.
If it were me I would have told all the detractors to bugger off, and booked a meal out this evening with my DS.

bundle · 14/06/2007 12:20

StifflersMom, I appreciate you've had a shock but I agree with some of the other posters that you need to try and talk to your son and rebuild your relationship together.

Also the way your parents react to being a sexual being can have a profound impact on your sexuality and feelings of shame and disgust could affect him forever.

I wish you strength in trying to deal with what is a very tough thing for you, xxx

kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:20

I cant be arsed reading through it all, i just read the OP,

you wrote it hun, i just believed what you wrote.

If you change your story half way through i cant know that from reading the OP.

TheDaVinciCod · 14/06/2007 12:21

i stilll think the meal is a good idea
maybe oyu coudl be devil may care wiht half a cider shandy...

TheDaVinciCod · 14/06/2007 12:21

kiytty oyu are beign a mad ol bint

Mhamai · 14/06/2007 12:21

While I'm at it can I apologise to you Stifler also because intead of offering you support on the othe thread I waded in to a senseless argument.

kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:22

pmsl cod

StifflersMom · 14/06/2007 12:22

I didn't change my story "hun".

OP posts:
kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:22

Ok hun

no probs

milkchocolate · 14/06/2007 12:22

For the benefit of newcomers to this thread, who hasent read it all, Stifflersmom has already spoken to her son and handled the situation very well. Show me the parent who hasnt at some point been OTT about something, but to her grace she has landed on her feet, imo, and by the looks of things has not done any damage to the emotional wellbeing to her son. Sorry Stifflersmom I know you dont need me to clarify for you, just seems that a lot of posters have not really read beyond the OP before commenting.

Mhamai · 14/06/2007 12:23

Jesus I'm off

kittylette · 14/06/2007 12:23

i might bag that usernam 'madoldbint'

marthamoo · 14/06/2007 12:24

Oh to be a perfect parent all the time - we all handle things badly, overreact, make situations worse. We are human, after all. My eldest is 10 - so this sort of scenario is not too far off and I'd love to think I'd know exactly the right way to react when faced with a situation like this: calmly get my point across, be wise and witty (like others, I will be laminating custy's genius post). But you know, in the face of a shock like that (and it is a shock, knowing 14 year old boys are sexually aware is a bit different to this kind of in-your-face explicitness when it's your own baby) maybe I'd react exactly the same way as StifflersMom.

Good luck with building your bridges, SM - it's a minefield, this parenting lark.