Well, as the mother of a rather bombastic teenager, believe me I understand the anguish of "knowing" that your kid is making a huge mistake. As the mother of that same young woman, who's now 21, I know a little more.
First, I now know that coercion and guilt tripping are exactly opposite to the best approach to helping a young person who you love to stay safe while learning to make sensible decisions. Second, I now know that my daughter had very good reasons, unknown to me and none of my damned business so long as she didn't ask for my advice, for thinking and behaving as she did. In other words, I know that I was quite mistaken about a number of things (read damned near
everything I thought I knew about my daughter's life)
If I had understood all that right from the beginning, I think she may have actually believed me more often, asked for my advice more readily and disclosed more of those difficult issues earlier on when I might have been able to be helpful.
But what's done is done. I hope this young couple succeed and take good care of themselves and each other and that, one day, the mother comes to accept her new role as the parent of an ADULT.
It is wrong to leave a stumbling stone in the road after it has tripped you.
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