conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2020-09-15 09:46 am

Dear Therapist: My Mom Won’t Stop Pressuring Me to Get Better Grades

Dear Therapist,

I’m 14 years old and I’m having problems with my mom. She constantly nags me about my grades not being high enough, even if I have gotten the highest in the class. She also keeps telling me to go out and run or to eat less to lose weight. I am heavier than some of my friends, but I’m not overweight. I remind her that my weight is fine because I’m strong and I dance a lot, but she doesn’t listen to me.

Even though she wants me to get top grades, when I study instead of going out and exercising, she criticizes me for being lazy. I study a lot, and I have a lot of hobbies, like making videos, singing, dancing, and much more. But I never have time for any of these, because I’m always being forced to work.

I’ve been wanting to address these issues with my mom for a while now, but I’m afraid I will be scolded by her. What should I do?

Anonymous


Dear Anonymous,

I’m glad that you reached out, because so many teenagers feel exactly as you do. They’re experiencing extreme parental pressure but believe that they either can’t or don’t know how to address it. And it absolutely should be addressed.

I can imagine how stressful and confusing these messages from your mom are, and how unpleasant these interactions must be. You say she doesn’t listen to you, so let’s think about why that is, and what might help her to hear you better.

Maybe we can start here: In her mind, she’s simply doing her job as a parent. If I were to ask her why she’s putting this kind of pressure on you, she would probably say that it’s because she loves you deeply. She likely believes that getting top grades and maintaining a certain weight lead to a happy, fulfilling life, and she feels she’s helping to guide you to that future. She might even believe that what you consider pressure is well-meaning “parental guidance,” and she may be baffled by what she considers your lack of appreciation for her attentiveness and care. All of this makes it hard for her to hear you.

What she doesn’t realize, however, is that she’s showing her love in a way that doesn’t feel loving, because it leaves you feeling unseen, anxious, and inadequate. For instance, instead of respecting your desire to engage in your interests and delighting in the joy they bring you, she devalues their relevance. Instead of showing pride in your academic achievements and how hard you work to earn them, she insists that you work even harder. Instead of admiring your beauty in a body that gives you strength, she urges you to become smaller. And perhaps most frustrating, she sets you up to disappoint her: If you study, you aren’t exercising enough; if you exercise, you aren’t studying enough. No matter what you do, you can’t please her.

The good news is that it’s not your job to please her. Nor is it your job to get the highest grades or have the slimmest body. Rather, the work of a healthy human is to learn how to please yourself—not your mom, your teachers, or society’s idea of what a woman’s body should look like. It’s to figure out what matters to you and to focus your energy in those directions. For you, what matters may be balance rather than undue stress, learning rather than a letter grade, growth rather than perfection, self-defined beauty rather than a rigid aesthetic, creativity rather than a constrained existence. Let those values be your north star.

So: back to your mom. Somewhere along the way, likely in her own childhood, a certain kind of achievement and appearance became very important to her. Maybe her parents put the same kind of pressure on her that she puts on you—but unlike you, she acceded to it without examining the consequences. Or perhaps her parents didn’t pay much attention to her at all, and she wished dearly for parents who were as invested in her “success” as she is in yours. I put success in quotes because for whatever reason, she long ago developed a definition of success that you are wisely questioning. If you get the highest grades but the cost is stress, depression, anxiety, and a feeling of never being good enough, that might not be a healthy definition of success at all. If you lose weight but end up going to sleep each night hungry, weak, irritable, and insecure about your appearance, that also doesn’t seem like the kind of “success” you should aspire to.

Up to this point, you and your mom have been arguing about her rules, but the real conflict—and the one you need to discuss directly—is the difference between your value systems. It might help to write your mom a letter so that you can express yourself clearly and without interruption, and explain to her what your value system is. You might start out by saying that you appreciate how much she cares about your well-being, and that you know she believes her efforts are for your benefit.

Then you can explain that even so, if her goal is to raise you to have a fulfilling life, the way she’s trying to help is actually making it less likely that this will come to pass. Let her know that you feel constantly stressed and overwhelmed, not because you’re a poor student, but because this intense focus on getting the best possible grades is interfering with the process of actually learning. Feel free to include some research on a growth mindset, which leaves room for making mistakes and learning from them, as well as studies on the positive outcomes associated with intrinsic motivation (meaning, an inner desire to learn) over extrinsic motivation (grades, parental approval). As for her comments about your weight, tell her that you’re happy with your appearance and appreciate having muscles that give you strength to dance well, and that you find her comments to be damaging and hurtful. You can also share that her expectations are creating resentment in your relationship, because when she is fixated on perfection, you start to feel that her love and acceptance are contingent on performance.

You might end the letter by explaining that the greatest gift she can give you as a parent is the freedom to be who you are—and to be embraced for it—and that you’re someone who works hard and does your best, but who also has many interests and who values making time for relaxation and fun. Tell her that it’s okay with you if she chooses to live her life differently from yours, but that it also needs to be okay with her for you to choose to live differently from her—because ultimately, you will anyway. And not only will you become a more whole human being if she supports you in this, but the two of you will have a much stronger relationship, both now and in the future.

Hopefully your letter will open up a different kind of conversation that will help create more understanding between you. And if it doesn’t, you might consider reaching out to a guidance counselor or another adult you trust for support in helping your mom to broaden her perspective. Either way, clarifying your values and advocating for yourself will be a learning experience you can’t put a grade on: Nobody gets to live your life for you.

https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2020/09/dear-therapist-my-mom-wont-stop-pressuring-me-to-get-better-grades/616294/
bikergeek: cartoon bald guy with a half-smile (Default)

[personal profile] bikergeek 2020-09-15 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, that. Especially when the behavior persists into adulthood, long after the kid has moved out and is living on their own.
minoanmiss: A detail of the Ladies in Blue fresco (Default)

[personal profile] minoanmiss 2020-09-15 08:01 pm (UTC)(link)
And perhaps most frustrating, she sets you up to disappoint her: If you study, you aren’t exercising enough; if you exercise, you aren’t studying enough. No matter what you do, you can’t please her.

I kind of cheered at this bit.

*attempts to send this letter back in time to my 14 year old self*
tielan: (Default)

[personal profile] tielan 2020-09-16 01:31 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, I got the "there is nothing that will make mom happy" vibe from the letter writer, too.

I'd say Mom has issues. Hopefully, the letter helps and doesn't make things worse ("how dare you criticise me by not taking on my value systems!") but at the least, LW can start from a base of "it's not wrong to want different things from my mother/parents" and work out how to deal with her mom.

I guess a pretty big part of adolescence is navigating that difference between your parents values and the values that you're developing yourself...
ashbet: (Default)

[personal profile] ashbet 2020-09-16 02:17 am (UTC)(link)
I really appreciate that the response specifically called this out.

The LW sounds like she's got her head on straight -- I hope she has good luck dealing with her mother, who sounds pretty dysfunctional.
rymenhild: Manuscript page from British Library MS Harley 913 (Default)

[personal profile] rymenhild 2020-09-15 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Too long and complicated. "Your mom is an asshole."
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2020-09-16 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
I think "reach out to another trusted adult for help" should be much more prominent, and I wish the therapist hadn't spent so long analyzing the mother and trying to make her more sympathetic. She's not the one who wrote in for help, and the LW didn't say "help me understand her", they said "help me address this with her safely". If I were the LW I'd find this answer really frustrating.
anotherslashfan: "We exist - be visible" caption on dark background. letter x is substituted with double moon symbol for bisexuality (Default)

[personal profile] anotherslashfan 2020-09-16 07:46 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, that! While the advice given is probably useful, I don't think LW needs help in understanding where their mother is coming from... In my experience, children dealing with high-demand parents usually already know, and have probably spent a lot of time agonizing about their parents' motivations.
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[personal profile] likeaduck 2020-09-16 01:15 pm (UTC)(link)
This.
green_grrl: (Default)

[personal profile] green_grrl 2020-09-16 03:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes. Much too much on this, and too much to wade through for the real advice. Should have just been, “Your mother may think she’s preparing you for success, either learning from or reacting against her own childhood.” Then the scripting help. Then, “Even with you communicating clearly, your mother may not change. Find a trusted adult.”
azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)

[personal profile] azurelunatic 2020-09-16 02:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I feel like "forced to work" didn't get unpacked enough.
mirlacca: still blue flowers (Default)

[personal profile] mirlacca 2020-09-16 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Am I the only person who thinks that telling a teenager that their job is "to learn how to please yourself" may just possibly not be a good idea?

Granted, the mom clearly has huge issues that need to be addressed, and this kid needs support in her attempts to communicate. She seems to have her head on straight, getting very good grades and a variety of hobbies, but generally speaking, would you tell your average-to-above teenager that a C is fine despite their ability to do better because her job in life is to learn how to please herself?
mirlacca: still blue flowers (Default)

[personal profile] mirlacca 2020-09-16 11:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Was that pressure cooker school a high school, or college?

Speaking entirely for myself, I didn't figure out what I wanted to do until I was about six years out of college. While some kids DO have the maturity to figure things out while in their teens, I really don't think most do. I wouldn't recommend a pressure cooker school at any level to anybody, but I do think that teenagers need to focus on acquiring the educational tools they need to be able to make informed choices about what kind of life will make them happy in the long run.