minoanmiss: Detail of a modern statue of a Minoan goddess holding up double axes in each hand. (Labrys)
minoanmiss ([personal profile] minoanmiss) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2021-03-19 11:48 am

Dear Prudence: My Daughter’s Girlfriend Is Going to Prison for Armed Robbery and Murder

With the commentary discussion in the first comment, if I can make it work.

She won’t break up with her.

My younger daughter was quite extraordinary as a child—observant, empathetic, sweet, and kind. Her dad and I tried to raise her as a caring, loving person, and it worked. For a while. During her teen years, she was greatly influenced by close friends who didn’t have good behavior modeled for them at home: swearing, no manners, obnoxious behavior. We are quite liberal, and she normally embraces our values but seemed to turn away on other things. She lost the sunny disposition she once had.

Her senior year she started dating a girl we knew very little about but who seemed to make her very happy, and as she said “made her feel beautiful” (I’m biased, I know, but my daughter is gorgeous). The most I could find out was that her girlfriend had a rough home life, but their teachers praised my daughter for being a good influence on her. Her girlfriend came to school more and did her homework, as urged by my daughter. That made me proud. Then, tragedy. On an evening when she promised to come watch my daughter’s game, she didn’t show. Turns out, she got into a car with a bunch of other friends who were on a mission to steal drugs and money from a home. Armed robbery and murder followed. Within a couple days all of them were arrested. My daughter was devastated but stood by her. I tried to talk to my daughter about them having no future now, as her girlfriend pleaded out and is going to prison. But due to COVID, her sentencing has been delayed, and she’s still at home. In addition to this, I see signs of jealousy, manipulation, and control. How do I help my daughter see this is not a healthy relationship? I’ve never felt so helpless.

-- Worried Sick


Feeling helpless is a very difficult feeling to have to contend with. But the path to something like (relative) serenity begins by acknowledging the people and situations you have no power over. You cannot force your daughter to stop loving her girlfriend, to break up with her, to consider their relationship unhealthy, or to abjure the company of people her own age who may swear, behave obnoxiously, or otherwise act out. The harder you try to exert your will in those areas, the more thwarted you’ll feel and the faster your daughter will pull away. You’ll have limited, circumspect opportunities to share your concerns or ask thoughtful questions, and if you navigate those opportunities with a light hand, you’ll likely get a lot further with your daughter than if you try to push. Offer your daughter support where you can; don’t offer her advice unless she asks you for it; and seek out friends and/or a therapist when you need to vent or cry about your baby girl.

I will also offer caution about dwelling on fond memories of your daughter’s childhood, which can sometimes be a barrier to establishing an honest, emotionally balanced relationship in the present. It seems like you may be longing for a time when you were readily able to keep your daughter safe and close, but for her that would mean longing for a time before she was able to make her own decisions, fall in love, or cultivate her own values. Trying to appeal to your daughter by reminding her what a great kid she used to be will likely make her feel as if you’re questioning where she went wrong or are unwilling to see her as an adult, so I’d save those remembrances for another time. All your feelings here are perfectly understandable, but you can’t process them with your daughter, who is striking out on her own as an adult.
heavenscalyx: (Default)

[personal profile] heavenscalyx 2021-03-19 04:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, Pru is right here: as hard as it is, LW, bite your tongue, get a therapist, and just be there for your daughter. Her girlfriend is going to prison soon. That will absolutely remove her from influencing your daughter, especially while COVID is a thing, because she'll get to budget her outside contacts. (LW doesn't mention whether the girlfriend is 18 or if she's going to juvie, I note.) This will likely be a shocking chapter in daughter's life, but girlfriend will go away soon enough, and teenagers have problems with object permanence when something is not in their face all the time (as do we all). Daughter will move on, go to college, get a life.

You cannot rescue her, LW. You can, however, be there to catch her if she stumbles or asks for help, and to model the life she can have if she stays the course. She's probably going to talk more to her siblings about all this since you've already tried to talk her out of things. Suck it up, you already screwed up, all you can do is try to remediate your own response and hang out.
conuly: (Default)

[personal profile] conuly 2021-03-19 06:55 pm (UTC)(link)
So, their daughter was, as a small child, kind and sweet and empathetic. Why are they surprised when, as an adult, she's still kind and sweet and empathetic to her girlfriend? Not everybody in the world gives up on their loved ones after they commit a crime. (Not that it's wrong to cut off communication if that's what you feel is best, but since Daughter evidently doesn't, more power to her.)
derridian: image of a city with storm clouds behind it (Default)

[personal profile] derridian 2021-03-19 11:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I dunno, I found the way LW framed the whole situation might have been to put it in the worst possible light without outright lying: that she wants to suggest that the girlfriend is inherently a murderer who thinks murder is cool instead of, possibly, a teenager/quite young woman who got caught up in something. Because she “she got into a car with a bunch of other friends who were on a mission to steal drugs and money ”, “Armed robbery and murder followed.”, “all of them were arrested ”, “her girlfriend pleaded out” which makes it sound like at the very least she wasn’t one of the people who came up with the plan and it’s entirely possible that she didn’t know that her friends were carrying. Her getting into a car with people intending to do burglary doesn’t show good judgement but people be dumb sometimes. And the “pleading out” was likely to the B&E, not the murder as I presume the girlfriend didn’t pull the trigger: I’m pretty sure the LW would have said that outright.

I’m not saying that the girlfriend is necessarily a great person – she may be problematic in various ways – but she might be someone whose life got out of control and who, herself, went through a traumatic experience and who is now facing severe consequences. And I wouldn’t have thought so deeply about how the situation could be very different from presented if it weren’t for the LW’s general tone and the very careful framing she used in her letter to make sure people would be on her side.
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[personal profile] sara 2021-03-20 05:03 am (UTC)(link)
Coming in as someone whose daughter's girlfriend was involved with a criminal situation (not murder! but sexual assault, to a degree that is still not and probably never will be entirely clear to me) I came down pretty actively on, "I know you care about her, but she's involved in some serious stuff and I don't think she is being very kind to you or treating you the way I want a partner to treat you."

It's been a few years now, and I'm still around and the girlfriend is a thing of the past, so.

Honestly, if either of my kids had a romantic partner who had just plead guilty in a criminal case involving physical violence, I would be having some serious discussion with the kid about whether this was really a kind of trouble they want in their life. Sometimes we have to turn away from someone we care about to protect our own health and safety.

But if the girlfriend is going to prison here in the next while...I'd also just wait it out, as much as possible (though I would be unlikely to welcome the girlfriend in my home). This is a problem that is likely to resolve itself in the next couple of years.