Upper Hutt Leader

My teenage daughter has no friends

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Q: My14-year-old daughter has no good friends. It really bothers her, she feels selfconsci­ous about it. She went to a small rural primary school and because of her birthday date, my husband, her teacher, and I had to make a decision whether she should go into the next year up, or stay where she is for another year.

Wechose to keep her down for another year, we thought it may benefit her academical­ly. Our decision to not put her up caused her to be the oldest/most mature in her year group. That decision was made 9-10 years ago and I still question it because the only strong friendship­s she has ever had have been in the year above her.

She has played sport and joined out-of-school clubs since primary school and still plays sport but no friendship­s have come from it and she is now wanting to quit.

I guess what I amasking is, what can I do for her? As a parent it breaks myheart to know she sits by herself at school. When she gets rejected or excluded from a friend group she is trying to join it really knocks her confidence and upsets her.

The only times my daughter goes out socially is when she has organised it, people cancel on her so she has stopped trying. She hasn’t been invited to a birthday party let alone just hanging out with mates since primary school. She’s constantly asking to move school but because of where we live moving school is not an option.

The decision you made all those years ago about class placement is probably irrelevant now. You made it in good faith and there’s plenty of instances where your exact situation has had a favourable outcome.

Some children – in fact many children – find their schooldays tough for a variety of reasons and it’s not until they leave school that they find their real friends or find their ‘‘place’’. It may be that your daughter will be a better fit for connecting with people when she’s an adult.

In the meantime, you could

A:

chat with your daughter about friendship and how it works. Does she understand reciprocit­y, listening, sharing? Does she ask people about themselves? Does she give off an air of desperatio­n? You could also set up ameeting with her teacher to see if there’s an aspect of your daughter’s personalit­y that might cause her to be on the outer.

You say your husband was her teacher in the early days. Did he notice your daughter having any trouble with social cues?

Another suggestion is that you befriend some of the mothers? Invite families over and let your daughter socialise in a group situation. These suggestion­s will only work if your daughter actually wants your help. It may be that your strategisi­ng and interferin­g makes things worse for her.

If that’s the case, you might just have to be empathetic and listen. Help her find joy in things that are more alone. Once she loses the panic and desperatio­n, she’ll be more attractive to her peer group.

You can guide your daughter in all aspects of socialisat­ion but at the end of the day, she’ll have to figure this out for herself. We want to fix things for our children but this may be one thing you can’t fix. Mary-anne Scott has raised four boys and written three novels for young adults, including Sticking With Pigs which was released in March 2018. (One Tree House). As one of seven sisters, there aren’t many parenting problems she hasn’t talked over. To send her a question email life.style@stuff.co.nz with Dear Mary-anne in the subject line. Your anonymity is assured.

 ?? 123RF ?? Many children find their schooldays tough and it’s not until they leave school that they find their real friends.
123RF Many children find their schooldays tough and it’s not until they leave school that they find their real friends.

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