What to do if your don't like your child's friends

Your child may have made a friend you don't quite like. Here are 11 ways to help you navigate this parenting dilemma.

By Cheryl Embrett

9. Beef up your child's social calendar. If you're discouraging a particular friendship, make it easier for your child to start a new one. Fill his calendar with activities he enjoys – sports, art, volunteering. It will give him a chance to meet new friends outside of school and the neighbourhood. If your son or daughter meets a friend you like, encourage the relationship. Offer to take them to the movies or some other outing, suggests Douglas. "Talk about how great it was and how it worked out so well for everybody – without being over-the-top about it."

10. Offer an escape route.
Sometimes a child wants to end a friendship that he knows isn't working but struggles with how to make the break. It's understandable. Even adults have trouble mastering this social skill. Always encourage your child to use you as the scapegoat – "Sorry, my mom says I have to do homework" – if it makes things easier. One mother and her son agreed that he would simply stop being available when his friend called or dropped by. The unwanted friend eventually got the message.

11. Be supportive.
"My son was a smart kid with good values, and it killed me that he was falling under the spell of this other kid," says Kara about her son Chris. Kara decided she would show Chris that he has good people in his life who like him for who he is. "I called up everyone I could think of who would be a positive influence – old friends, a cousin who is a computer engineer (Chris likes computers), a nephew who had just started university." Finally, things turned around. Chris no longer sees his old friend. "You have to be so supportive," says Kara. "You can't give up, as heartbreaking as it can be."

What to do when you don't like your teen's girlfriend or boyfriend
Take a deep breath, don't panic and find comfort in the fact that early relationships tend to burn out quickly. Here's how to wait it out.

• "Don't let your dislike of your teen's boyfriend or girlfriend hinder your relationship with your child," says Michele Borba, author of Nobody Likes Me, Everybody Hates Me: The Top 25 Friendship Problems and How to Solve Them (Wiley, 2005). Make sure your child knows you're always there for him, regardless of whom he's dating.

• Keep the lines of communication open. One Dartmouth, N.S., mother of three teens made a point of never saying a bad word about her daughter's boyfriend, even though she felt he was lazy. "I wanted to keep an open dialogue," she says. "I would ask questions, like, 'What does Adam plan on doing after high school?' I wanted to get my daughter thinking, 'Is this the person I see myself with in five years?'"

• Offer distractions. Make sure your teen stays involved with hobbies and extracurricular activities, and still spends time with family and friends.
*Names have been changed.

Page 4 of 4

« Previous

Read more:
Youths dragged down by smoking
What one mother learned from her teenage daughter's pregnancy
Teach your kids to make a difference

Check out:
CanadianLiving.com Parenting
CanadianLiving.com Family


For inspired articles and ideas when you're on the go, get Canadian Living Mobile!
Access Canadian Living's smart solutions for everyday living anytime, anywhere -- and best of all, it's FREE! Get it now: visit m.canadianliving.com on your BlackBerry® or iPhone™.

Your Comments

Comment reported

Thank you for reporting this comment as inappropriate.

Back to Comments »

Add your comments

Please fill in all required fields (*).

Back to Comments »

Advertisement

Featured Menu







Our Partners




Our Contests