Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ex-wild-child faces teen’s questions

- Hector Cantu & Carlos Castellano­s Carolyn Hax is away. The following first appeared Oct. 7, 2007.

Ask Carolyn

Dear Carolyn: I was wondering how to deal with my teenage daughter, who wants to know about my past history. I want to be honest with her but don’t want to share all. When I told her I felt her questions were too personal, she said she doesn’t have anyone else she can talk to and just wants some advice.

Her questions are: When did you first have sex? Younger than you are now. Did you ever smoke pot? Every day in high school under the big tree in front of the school. Have you ever had a one-night stand? More than I care to remember.

I know she has discussed having sex with her boyfriend, so this is a very important time to be as helpful as I can, but unfortunat­ely my discomfort with my past doesn’t allow me to be as open as I want to be. HELP.

Anonymous: It does, however, allow you to be as open as you need to be. There’s nothing that says your daughter has to dig up every butt under every tree for you to be able to guide her. Don’t lie. Just say, “I think it’s more important that I listen.”

I would argue, and you could say to her, that being in possession of a parent’s entire social history is distractin­g. The parent who followed every rule to the letter becomes an intimidati­ng – or worse, seemingly unsympathe­tic – act to follow. The parent who availed herself of a chemical assist just to get through homeroom becomes the “… and s/he turned out fine!” example that clearly you fear becoming – you and everyone else who paid a visit to the tree.

It’s a good example not to become. Lost in the blithe tale of surviving one’s youthful idiocy are all the subtleties of that process (as well as the one unsubtlety of it, that not everyone survives). When people manage to self-correct after youthfully veering off course, they can credit: dumb luck, interventi­on, addiction-resistant genes, a stable upbringing, the presence of upstanding peers – or the absence of toxic ones – limited access to controlled substances, effective contracept­ives, street-smart educators, lower-potency drugs, good reflexes, geography, luck, luck and more luck.

Also lost in the retelling is your control over how your informatio­n glut is received. The most prominent thing in your mind may be your pain in recalling certain mistakes. But if your storytelli­ng skills fall short or if your daughter’s maturity level isn’t unusually high, the most prominent thing she’ll hear is, “Mommy got baked every day!” It’s just the way things work, that shocking facts travel much better from person to person than nuanced emotions do.

Someday, you and your daughter might, and probably will, have a great conversati­on about those subtleties, and how you became who you are, and what that can mean for her. But apparently not now. Not until your hesitation gives way to a desire to be more forthcomin­g. That will be your best indication that the time has come to say more.

Right now your daughter is a work in progress, and what she needs most is a parent – one person she can really trust to hear what she has to say.

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Carolyn Hax

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