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Expert Q&A
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| By Chris Crutcher Author, Licensed Child and Family Therapist | ||
My 17-year-old son has gone way overboard in love with a girl who is extremely manipulative, and from what we have seen, does not share the same enthusiasm for him in the love category. She continues to see past boyfriends, refuses to go with him to prom although she is attending her own with another boy she was planning to marry before dating my son. He is seemingly way more attached, and it worries me.
I know often people become very attached to each other after having sex. Are there other things that would cause such attachment? My son has had many girlfriends, and even now has the opportunity to date at least a couple of other girls who are interested in him. Plus, this obsession is way out of character for him. He usually will not put up with deception and manipulative things. I am so worried, and I do not know what to do."
The good news is that this is unusual. If it were standard operating procedure for him, I'd be a little more worried, because it would likely be a response to some control issues. Reality is, adolescence sometimes hits us with "timing." There's not a lot you can do but let him talk, and be vigilant. If you try to talk him out if it, you will more than likely talk him IN to it, and he's already in over his head.
There's a painful lesson in this, and what you want to do is let it run its course, unless you see dangerous behavior or big-time depression start to set in. At that time, it's not a bad idea to try to hook him up with a good therapist if he's up for it, because sometimes that kind of thing needs to be talked about in anonymity. If he's miserable enough, he'll go for the idea. Don't push it, though.
Be there to talk, and get it out of your head that you can make sense to him. Your best bet is to listen, connect to the pain of it. Most kids need a witness in times like these. They don't need advice. They already know it, and if you let them work through it, they will give it to themselves."
Related Expert Q&A
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- Is it OK for me to come right out and ask my 16-year-old if he is having sex?
- I overheard my son and his friends using very derogatory terms to describe certain girls. Should I talk to him about it?
- My daughter's boyfriend has been diagnosed with leukemia. I think that with or without the illness, the relationship is becoming too much of an obsession. Am I right?
- A dating jealousy has arisen between my twin daughters -- what should I do?
More Answers by this Expert
- We recently moved into a new neighborhood, and my 8-year-old son has made friends with the 13-year-old boy next door. They share a common interest in sports, but I am reluctant to encourage the friendship because of the age difference. What should I do?
- Should I wait to tell my son about his complicated adoption until he is 18?
- My husband says an adopted child will feel inferior to our biological children. How can I argue that?
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- My daughter is getting married and she wants both her adoptive dad – my husband – and her biological father involved. How do I guide her in this? How do we word things on the program?



