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Paulinej
01-02-2005, 07:41 PM
I am an older single parent now 60 years old with a 16 year old son. I have raised him alone since he was 6 months old and we have had a very close relationship up until two years ago. He was always bright, ambitious (wanted to be an architect), kind and loving.
In a nutshell: I remained single keeping any relationship I had separate from my son as they were not serious. I started a business from the house so I could be here after school for him. His father lives locally but hasn't been involved much (his choice) until recently when he separated from his wife of 3 years. He then wanted our son to hang out with him at his apartment and my son jumped at the opportunity to be part of his dad's life. Dad then reconciled with the wife and my son visited every other weekend until last year when things between us got so bad, fighting for control of every single issue and not doing homework that I told him he had to go live with his dad until he could be respectful towards me and his teachers - I thought he needed a male role model (I do not have brothers or parents to fulfil this role). My son was an honor roll student until living with his self-centered father who does not check his homework nor seems to care how he does at school or with (now non-existent) friends. My son has always been kind, thoughtful, responsible and a good student but now is lazy, has no energy or passions, uses bad language and is hanging out with his 23 yr old step brother and his friends who gamble and take drugs. My ex will not respond to my calls or e-mails and now my son is ignoring me too. He didn't show up to spend Christmas as promised, neither has he called to wish me Happy new year - he seems to go out of his way to intentionally be cruel and hurt me and I am at a loss to understand why and how to cope with it. I left him a final message yesterday telling him I love him and always will be here for him when he needs me and it is now up to him to call me. I cannot sleep and cry every time I see the presents and his stocking under the tree. I know he has to grow up and separate from me but am afraid his dad is not filling the parenting role. I am terrified that he has no direction and will get into trouble and fail high school. It is a crucial time in his life and I do not know how to communicate with him if he will not answer my calls or come to see me. Any ideas on the path should I take?

Mike Bradley
01-03-2005, 08:47 PM
Dear Mom,
If you look through this website you will find many very similar letters to yours. As horribly painful as this is, it is not an uncommon scenario in divorced families.
So what to do? First, stop viewing your son as if he has a terminal disease. He's got a "flu", not a cancer. He needs to learn many lessons about important things like responsibility, character, frustration tolerance, hard work, and so on. One chapter in that learning curve is seeing the dark side of things. If Dad's house is as bad as you think, he'll learn a lot there that can make him wiser if you can be wise and strong enough to keep outreaching to him in the right way.
You speak as if he owes you his love and concern. I hate to tell you this, but he doesn't. He's just a crazy teen trying to find his way in a crazy world. DO NOT PUT YOUR EMOTIONAL NEEDS IN THE HANDS OF A (temporarily) CRAZY PERSON! He can't handle himself, let alone take care of you. Try to not take this so personally (even though I would). Picture him as a tantrumming 4-year-old and you've got the right picture. Yes, he might get temporarily derailed right now, but better to screw up school at age 16 than to destroy a family at 36. These are the years where we're supposed to be self-centered and unempathic so we can learn the true meaning of caring and compassion.
Next, do not place those "goodbye forever" calls. But keep making those dispassionate "I love you and are here for you whenever you're ready" calls. It doesn't matter that he never calls back. It matters that you show him what selfless, patient, and tolerant love is all about by rising above his cruel rejections, and continuing to let him know that as the grown up you will never quit on him. Your goal here is not to shape a 16-year-old son, but to teach the future father of your grandchildren.
Then redirect yourself. Get rid of the Christmas tree "memorial". Give those gifts to some needy teens who will appreciate them. And while you're at the homeless shelter, consider volunteering some time in a place where your love and compassion can have a more immediate impact, to help you feel more connected and thus better able to see your son's behavior in perspective.
If you can do all of these very difficult things, the odds are great that your son will come back to you. Be ready then to consider giving him more freedom to be whoever he is, even if that son does not fully meet with your expectations and hopes for him. It sounds as if he was possibly "too good for too long", a common precursor to kids who make these radical turnarounds in behavior. He might be making up for some overdue rebellion and acting out. When he's played out that string, he'll very likely start to miss his real home with you.
Good luck and please keep us posted.