rss 1.0rss 2.0rss atom 
Home4 Users OnlineSite Stats

About Me


I'm teaching a teenager to drive!
  » Read More!



Recent Posts

My Blogroll

Recent Comments

Archives

Categories

A Pre-Teen Halloween

October 30, 2006

Every night I sit on my daughter’s bed before she goes to sleep. Sometimes it’s for 5 seconds, sometimes five minutes, sometimes fifteen. There are times she has little to say and other times she rattles on and on and reminds me of one of those wind-up dolls that just won’t stop going in circles unless you knock it over.

About two weeks ago she sat on the edge of the bed with me, put her head on my shoulder, and said, “I’m sad.”

Now this could always go either way. It could be a serious plea that needs tending to or it could be her rip-roaring sense of humor that’s trying to get ice-cream in bed or more time out of her room. I always go with the former until I’m sure, because I never want to underestimate her capacity for sadness, even though she is the closest thing to a pixie sprite/perpetually happy camper that I’ve ever known.

Good call.

Seems that her BFF had made “other” plans for Halloween, and after being costume twins and/or trick-or-treat pals since age four, and this shook my daughter to her core. Her eyes welled with tears. She just didn’t understand. But I did. It was sixth grade and junior high and girls make new friends and move on. Even the history of seven Halloweens together did not outweigh the lure of the “new girls” for her BFF.

That night, Pippiiee slept with me.

The undercurrent and lack of enthusiasm about Halloween hung over my house like some big creepy cobweb. I couldn’t get out of my head how this little girl just blew off my daughter, and how her mother did nothing about it. Not that we can or want to force kids to be friends with ours, but to alert me that things were changing. I felt duped. But, I decided not to get involved and to just help my own daughter from the sidelines. She was reluctant to choose a costume or make plans. She said it just wouldn’t be the same. I was heartbroken but knew it was a lesson in cliques and girls that was coming sooner or later. Sooner being the operative word.

I gave her suggestions of other friends to make plans with; and illustrated how lucky she was to have friends in different groups of girls, but also how that could definitely make things more complicated. I even told her to invite friends to our house for Halloween - that I’d order pizza after their finished their sugar indulgence - but nothing seemed right to her.

Then last week she came home from Hebrew School and said, “Me and BFF admitted to eachother that we are both really sad we’re not matching for Halloween, so we are going to.”

And that was that. I didn’t do a thing except stay out of it, and they resolved it themselves.

Later that day I spoke to BFF’s mom, who relayed to me the same story that was going on in my house. Her daughter came home and said that MINE had made other plans and what was she to do; that she sulked and pined for days over the lost tradition.

Both the other mom and I had decided to stay out of it and allow the girls to follow what we thought was a new Halloween path, when the truth is, there was a huge misunderstanding looming. It took two honest eleven year olds to work it out. On their own. With no help from the well-read, highly educated, involved, sensitive, caring mothers.

So, today, the day before Halloween, we took the girls for costumes. No more fairy princesses or plastic pumpkin trick-or-treat bags…this year it’s hippies. Tie dyes shirts, headbands and some funky $3.99 peace sign plastic jewelry. And since neither of us had any of it, $40 later the girls are set and the moms are relieved. Honestly, in celebration of avoiding a preteen catastrophe, I’d have spent even more.

Just when I figured out it was time for me to keep my nose out of her burgeoning social business, a little intervention would have saved two families some sad, cranky preteens and some troubled, annoyed moms.

Next time I’ll be right there ready to stick my nose in. Then I plan to remember Halloween, sit back in the shadows, and see what my daughter comes up with on her own.

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

[I have more scary Halloween revelations over at The Imperfect Blog.]


12 Responses to “A Pre-Teen Halloween”

  1. Mega Mom Says:

    Gravatar

    Isn’t it amazing that with this post, all of the sad, bad, fun, scary, trying teenage memories come flooding back? :))

  2. Her Bad Mother Says:

    Gravatar

    You know, this is such a wonderful story. All the more given that it could have gone the other way - and that you seemed to be handling it going the ‘other way’ so wonderfully simply by letting her have the experience and being there for support. Your faith in your daughter is inspiring.

  3. Suebob Says:

    Gravatar

    Good call, Mom.:)>-

  4. Wendy Boucher Says:

    Gravatar

    You are amazing. I’m going to remember to ask you for advice when similar situations arise around here.:)

  5. bubandpie Says:

    Gravatar

    I’m so glad the BFship has been mended! Because I was appalled when I read the first part of your post - I thought, “You mean, that happens?” I’m still BFF with my BF from grade two, and I still meet for occasional playdates with my first friend from kindergarten (even though I moved to a different school district in grade one), so to me it’s NOT normal or acceptable to move on. Don’t think you can stop being friends with me OR my daughter, kiddos!

  6. molly Says:

    Gravatar

    There’ll be lots more times like that when you have to bite your lip, sit on your hands, and refrain from throwing rocks or tantrums (your own). Eighth was tough and it took a whole year for things to get back to normal. I’m glad the girls were able to work it out. Hopefully they’ll be able to be BFF.

  7. Nancy Says:

    Gravatar

    Wow, I can’t even begin to tell you how good this story makes me feel. I have been terrified of how my girls will adjust to the pressures of teen cliques — even though my oldest is only 4, I have dreaded moving into “that age,” because it was so horrible for me. This gives me so much hope. I mean, I know it’s in large part because you are such an amazing mom — you’ve given her the coping skills she needs, you let her try things and work them out for herself. But I hope I can be that kind of mom, and seeing you as an example will help me to learn. :-)

  8. nonlineargirl Says:

    Gravatar

    How great that your daughter and her friend talked about this. I am not sure that the 11 year old me would have been that forthright. I would have just sulked. My mom probably would have been non-interventionist, but I am not sure that intervention would have changed things here. What were you going to do, talk to the other mom about her fickle daughter?

  9. J Says:

    Gravatar

    I’m really glad they worked it out. They must have both been so relieved to realize it was just a misunderstanding. :)

  10. amishav Says:

    Gravatar

    Sometimes the hardest thing to do is to let your kids handle things themselves- it was very wise of you to handle things as you did.

  11. kittenpie Says:

    Gravatar

    Aw, it’s so cute that they were both feeling that way and finally talked about it! I remember my BFF and I in high school having some snippish exchange one morning as we went off to our classes, and then both running back to our lockers between periods to apologize after feeling badly the whole time. Young drama, no?

  12. Bonnie Says:

    Gravatar

    Letting your kids learn to solve their own problems can be hard. My Maggie is having a little tiff with her BFF right now– and the sullen looks and pouting is making me crazy!

Leave Your Comment

:) :( :d :"> :(( \:d/ :x 8-| /:) :o :-? :-" :-w ;) [-( :)>- more »

Get a free globally-recognized avatar to display next to your comment. Check this box:

BlogHer Ad Network
More from BlogHer
Advertise here
BlogHer Privacy Policy


Site Info.

Close
E-mail It