"Hey, Mom!" Your fourteen-year old daughter greets you as she
walks to the car. Your eyes bulge at the blue eye shadow and
black liner smudged around her eyes.
Your daughter turns and
waves to a made-up girl in a tight shirt and ripped jeans
standing on the sidewalk. The girl waves back and saunters away,
hips swinging from side to side.
"Who's your friend?" you manage to ask.
"Oh, no one," she replies.
Sooner or later, our daughter will buddy up with a peer whose
values and upbringing do not match our own. We must fight our
instincts to lock her in her room until the danger passes.
"Most experts agree that a friendship with a
less-than-stellar kid is unlikely to have any lingering effect
on your child, if you handle the situation with care," says Sue
Woodman in her Parenting article, "What To Do When You Don't
Like Your Child's Friends."
Research shows that well-adjusted children are rarely hurt by
friendships with their wayward peers. It appears that
well-grounded values and kindness rub off quicker than
dysfunction and meanness.
Many children choose friends who complement them. A shy girl
befriends the class clown. A fearful child befriends the
daredevil. They do so because they get something out of the
relationship. As needs change, often, so do friendships.
Nonetheless, as parents, we worry. We worry that another's
values will rub off on our children. We worry that our daughter
will make poor decisions in the face of temptation. We worry
we'll lose the daughter we know and love.
If we forbid the friendship, we set up a dilemma for our
child. Desire to follow the rules conflicts with the desire to
explore "otherness." Nearly always, the child will choose her
own needs and will continue seeing the forbidden friend at
school or social events. For some, the adolescent's desire for
autonomy makes the forbidden friendship all the more attractive.
According to Larry Dumont, MD, an adolescent psychiatrist at
KidsPeace National Hospital for Kids in Crisis, most kids try on
many different identities before finding one that fits.
"It's a rite of passage, a sign of their becoming their own
person," says Dumont. "Finding their identity and discovering
their place in the world - these are the major challenges of the
teenage years."
If your daughter befriends a peer whose behavior worries you,
Dumont suggests asking three questions:
* What purpose does this friendship or group serve in your
daughter's life? * How does this friendship enhance her
self-image? * If you take your daughter out of the group, what
substitute activity or person can meet her needs?
"Kids have always been involved in groups. This is to be
expected and can be a very beneficial activity for teenagers.
Don't jump to conclusions about new friends or strange clothes.
These may be just the proverbial 'phase' they're going through."
The one exception is if your child takes up with a gang.
"Groups often take on characteristics of their own. People
who would never dream of certain behavior on their own or with
one or two others seem to become immune to the cries of inner
conscience when they are part of a large group," says Eda LeShan
in When Your Child Drives You Crazy.
"Restrictions and punishments are surely no answer, however.
Such methods tend to push a child into the welcome embrace of
those who won't sit in judgement upon him. The most important
antidote is free and honest discussion of the temptations and
the dangers," says LeShan.
But how do we talk so our daughter will listen? Show faith in
her judgement. State our concerns rather than our values say the
experts.
Ellen Rosenberg, in her book, Get A Clue!, suggests the
following:
Say, "I know she means a lot to you, but:
* here's what concerns me..." * here's how I see you change
when you're with her..." * here's how I see you treat your
sister when she's around..." * here's what scares me..."
Say, "While I appreciate that continuing this friendship is
your decision:
* I hope you'll be strong about what you let yourself do." *
I hope you'll at least think about this." * I'm worried about
her influence."
Even though we don't like it, there comes a time when we
can't control every situation our daughter encounters. In those
situations, we hope she will hear our voice, feel our love, and
make the mature choice. If we've talked openly through the
years, chances are she'll have the insight and strength to make
the right decision.