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Or will it disappear as the teen grows up? Can a resentment of a 14 yo go to her adult years

2007-07-06 18:19:27 · 20 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pregnancy & Parenting Adolescent

20 answers

If it is typical teen angst, then no. If the parents mistreated the teen, unless s/he gets help the resentment could last a lifetime. So, it depends upon the cause and whether or not it is warranted.

2007-07-06 18:23:41 · answer #1 · answered by lcmcpa 7 · 6 0

HELL NO IT DOESN'T ALWAYS DISAPPEAR.

See, I have living proof of this.

My Dad got a girl pregnant when he was 14. His parents never let him live it down, they constantly cut him down and disiplined him. Never were they there to support him. And guess what? The girl was 17! Everyone said,"oh that poor girl, Scott did that to her."

If I was alived I would have kicked everyone's asses in my entire town. My poor Daddy. Now he's a bitter man. He gets drunk every night and puts all of his hard earned money up his nose. He grows weed and he started all of this when his parents first turned their noses to him.

Whenever we're around his parents he has to be Mr. Perfect. He can't show any signs of being abnormal. When he's at his parents' house, he always cleans up after their stanky asses. I feel horrible about this!

It seems like he has no feelings. It's impossible to talk to him because he's always drunk and threatening lives. He took me and another sibling away from our Mom just so he didn't have to pay child support. Now he yells and cusses every time we need something from the store!

He also has a 4 month old baby girl with the sweetest girl in the world, but she's 24. When he got the guts to tell his Dad, he said, "Scott, you've been alone in a rowboat in the middle of the ocean since you were 14 and you'll always be out there."

How evil is that? I guess MOST parents aren't THAT horrid to their children. Now that I got all that on the table, I feel better.

Yup, if you do something bad enough, your teen won't ever forgive you. It'll **** up the rest of their life. Of course, this can't be your situation, not even close. At least I hope not LOL.

Every teen goes through a parent hater phase. I'm 15 right now and I'm not completely through it. Teens constantly question authority and try to break it down because hormones have them so bull headed. No need to worry if your teen hates you right now. It happens with everyone!

Best wishes! :)

2007-07-06 18:51:42 · answer #2 · answered by Pretty Maggie Money Eyes 7 · 0 0

Usually it disappears as soon as the teen moves away (unless the parents were truly bad parents). Nearly all teens resent their parents and they dont all have bad parents. Once you go to college or move out, things get a lot better cause you dont have to deal with them on an everyday basis.

2007-07-06 19:25:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It depends what their parents did. In my case, as an adult I realize that the things I resented my dad of, was because of circumstance. And what he was doing was done out of love. He just wanted me to be the best person I could be. But I as a teen , couldn't see what he was trying to accomplish.

2007-07-09 17:00:28 · answer #4 · answered by taina4life 1 · 0 0

It depends on what her parents did to make her resent them so much.

My mom raised me well but now I realize that some of the things she says are very hypocritical, and I know that if I have kids someday, I wouldn't want to take my mom's example and do or say things that my mom did/said to my kids. So I do have a pretty strong resentment towards her. It comes and goes though, so it can vary with people.

But yes, I believe that it can.

2007-07-06 18:33:05 · answer #5 · answered by cosmopolitan_nyc 3 · 0 0

It depends on how a parent copes with the child's resentment. If the parents understand it's a phase, they should do quite well. If the parents make their daughter an outcast from the family...then they won't fare so well.

2007-07-06 18:51:06 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think it can if the resentment is strong enough. But mostly it depends on the teen.

2007-07-06 18:22:10 · answer #7 · answered by imcool_likeyou 2 · 0 0

For me personally it never went away. My mom kicked me out when I was 15 and now 16 years later I still can't stand to be around her for longer than a few minutes. We've never resolved our issues because she feels like she did nothing wrong and won't even talk about anything. I wish I had a better relationship with her, but I guess it just wasn't meant to be.

2007-07-07 03:19:11 · answer #8 · answered by Lostlove 5 · 0 0

Yes they can, my sister is 40 (the oldest) and she has alot of resentment towards our parents especially our mother, and it causes many problems in our family, it's ruined many holidays and other occasions that should have other wise been happy.

2007-07-06 18:32:31 · answer #9 · answered by ashley b 2 · 0 0

actual - i don't have faith that there is a "one length suits all" way of elevating infants. whilst they're very infants, they go with self-discipline and habitual. As they strengthen older the exercises can boost to their point of means (i.e. sons and daughters get cranky in the event that they stay wakeful previous their bedtime, older young ones no longer lots). At each and every point of their progression a newborn's 'habitual' differences. it truly is prevalent even in very strict properties. in spite of the incontrovertible fact that the expectancy of the mothers and fathers for his or her infants selection very much ... my perception is that if a newborn is used to doing the ideal factor, and is anticipated to do the ideal factor (even whilst no person is watching) then this newborn starts to handle duty for his or her movements. very own duty - it truly is what separates a ethical individual from an immoral individual.

2016-10-20 03:37:45 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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