26 answers

Seeking Advice for Daughter and Lying

I would like to know if anyone has some advice on an almost teenage daughter about lying and smart mouthing all the time....sometimes nothing can be going on and she has a smart remark for something or you can catch her in a lie and their would no reason for her to start lying and it just gets worse and worse...and we have tried taking stuff away but we ony have them every other weekend and it is getting worse not better..

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So What Happened?™

I would like to thank most of the moms who messaged me about my daughter lying...I say some b.c there were some of you who said let me husband handle it and just be her friend, that does not work at all...we have tried and just b/c i am 22 does not mean I can not handle an almost teen b.c I was there just not long ago and I know how it feels going through teenage years by yourself..but I wan to THANK YOU most of you who gave me tremendous advice and starting next friday her and I are going to sit down and hav a good talk AGAIN b/c we have had these before but have only lasted for a week or so. But I do thank you again Moms

Featured Answers

G.,
This is something that is not unusual. I recommend Love and Logic and you can get a lot of the information online, through the school system, and I know a lady that does group work with it at her counseling office. Her name is Patti Villalobos and her number is ###-###-#### she is just wonderful. Also, there is a Family training that is very helpful, it teaches everyone to use respect and accountability in relating to each other and gets feelings and issues out in the open so they can be dealt with in a healthy way. Go to www.gopathways.org and look for Family training or Teen training. The coordinator is a friend of mine and she is very willing to help. Ask for Margret if you call. 800-866-7284

1 mom found this helpful

Take her bedroom door off of the hinges and don't put it back on until you see major improvement. It worked for me!

I am a step-parent too. I was also young when I became one (I am 27 now). I learned the hard way to not be her mother. She has a mother. I am my step-daughter's friend. She use to constantly try to test me. Now I don't tell her to do anything. I ask her to help me, ect. Leave the disipline up to you husband. She is trying to test you. The more you respect her, the more she will respect you. She is trying to show you that you are not her mother.
Sometimes let her do stuff with you her mother wouldn't let her do. Let her have 2 coke's a day, or wear more makeup that you like. Whatever it may be, give a little and maybe she will too.

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I totally agree with the becoming her friend advice. She has a mother, she has a father. You have the very unique opportunity (for you and her) to be the mentor every young girl needs. With that said, it has to come with guidelines/structure and boundaries. If I were in your shoes, I would strongly urge family counseling. It is not something to do only when there is a serious issue bubbling out of control, but could give you perspective, her perspective and your entire family guidance on your new roles.

Now, as a mother of a just-turned-13 year old daughter, I will tell you, by far the most efficient punishment I have found is every time she smarted off to me, I would take her cell phone away for a day. I would change her voice mail to say something like, "This is E.(my name), Ivey's mother. She currently does not have access to her cell phone because she doesn't know how to speak to her parents. As soon as she learns to do that in a respectful way, she will return your call if you'd like to leave her your number. (then I always throw in something TOTALLY DORKY, like "Ciao baby!"). I also return each and every text message with a response (that I copy and resend each time...it doesn't take long to do that!) very similar. It works. I have had more parents of her friends call me and say they have started doing it. I had to do it about 4 times before she "got it". SUCCESS feels good and it wasn't mean, or loud or nasty or anything like that. She realized the consequences of her actions.

Good luck to you!
Best,
E.

2 moms found this helpful

Be consistent with the consequences. Lying is one way of asserting independence and to see how far they can go. You and your husband should sit down with her and go over consequences - maybe make her come up with a few of her own - tell her to think seriously about it. As far as how to get her to stop - maybe that comes with maturity. Kids speak before they think - so, a lot of times, they say the first thing that comes out - especially if they're on the defensive. My son was a terrible liar. It didn't matter what it was about, he would lie. Now, 21, he's outgrown it for the most part - but, habits are had to break and lying throughout teen years it does become a habit. Just pray and be patient - and, again, be consistent with consequences.

1 mom found this helpful

G.,
This is something that is not unusual. I recommend Love and Logic and you can get a lot of the information online, through the school system, and I know a lady that does group work with it at her counseling office. Her name is Patti Villalobos and her number is ###-###-#### she is just wonderful. Also, there is a Family training that is very helpful, it teaches everyone to use respect and accountability in relating to each other and gets feelings and issues out in the open so they can be dealt with in a healthy way. Go to www.gopathways.org and look for Family training or Teen training. The coordinator is a friend of mine and she is very willing to help. Ask for Margret if you call. 800-866-7284

1 mom found this helpful

Hey G., I am a step mom my self... My best advice regarding a teen girl is put yourself in her place and try to first understand that most likely she is probably just acting out and rebelling like all teenage girls do and is wanting attn from her dad to reassure her that she like her mother will not be replaced in his life. Try to invite her on a shopping trip, go out to lunch have your nails done, just a girls day out, once you connect it will be easier to talk to each other regarding what is going on, I would not try to talk at her or punish her because with teen girls this will not work, try to talk to her like an adult, get her to open up about what is really bothering her that is causing her to act like this. She may not feel she can trust you yet. I am not saying to be her friend, but try not to be the main disciplinary either. I have found with my 16 yr old son, who acted a lot like this for a few years, when my husband who is his step dad tried to get in on the punishing, that once I understood that he was wanting me to listen to his side and not just take my husbands side instantly, he wanted me to sit and talk with him like an adult, he wanted to be heard on how he felt about some things, once we got this in the open and allowed him a voice and opened up communication lines, we all get along much better now. Teens will always lie and try to get away with things, this is just them trying to be adults and become independant. I hope some of this advice helps and I wish you all the luck and wisdom a step mom needs :)

I have a 12 year old step son that likes to lie as well. He ends up lying about stupid little things, but the fact is that he is still lying about something. We were grounding him, and taking stuff away...didn't really seem to phase him. So what we do now is have a lie jar. Every time he is caught in a lie he has to pay $1.00. Might sound a little expensive, but we wanted an amount that wasn't extreme but would still affect him, and boy does it every. I think we've gotten to about 10.00, and the lies have stopped considerably. The smart mouthing, that's a whole other issue, and I don't know a good answer for that one.
Good Luck. Being a step-mom is not easy. I became one at 22.

Take her bedroom door off of the hinges and don't put it back on until you see major improvement. It worked for me!

G. I have a 15yr old step son who lives with us and lied all the time we finially had him write sentences and out of the dictionary. As far as letting your husband do it and you be the friend well what they are really saying is let her walk all over you and her not have respect for you. I have been there.

I am in the same boat except for my little "angel" of a stepdaughter is an only child... i have a son who "bothers her" so i get a lot of back talk & she's very jealous & spiteful! & She acts like an angel around her dad & herself around me! (sneaky) At first i tried very hard not to be the terrible stepmother but then she started walking all over us! We have her full time!... I tell her very blatantly "don't say that,dont do that, be nice, go to your room"... She's not a bad child so we have to pick & choose carefully how we discipline her. In our case she is gone on the weekends so we basically told her that if she didnt straighten up she's "grounded" from the fun things she gets to do on the weekends! Also we are planning on taking away things that she likes to do at home! When she acts good we will let her play/ do all the things she wants. It's immature behavior so we've decided we're going to treat her how she's acting, like a baby! Also make sure that your husband is backing you 100% so that way she'll have no one to run too & whine! GOod luck! I know you're frustrated! i feel your pain! :)

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