My daughter is now pregnant at 17, and she is going to see just hard being a parent is.
My daughter began to sneak around and hand out with the wrong people. The more we tried to advise her against it the more she would do. This past Janurary she ran away. It happened to be the same day we got a call that my father-in-law was in the last stages of cancer and that we needed to get to the hospital. My daughter was gone for 3 days, my son and my ex-husband looked for her the entire time. My husband now and I were three hours away planning his father's funeral.
Once she was found, she went to stay at her dad's house, she was tired and angry at him and after being told that she could not do something she blew up. She spent days in a hospital and was put on antidepressants. Once she came back home she was still trying to sneak around. I just finally decided to talk to the young man she had a crush on. I called we talked and he came over to meet us face to face. Since meeting we know his parents and even if we don't like the situation at this time, our daughter is happy, she is staying at home, the fighting is done and we can all talk.
I guess what I am trying to say is talk to your daughter, talk to the young man, get to know their situation. If your daughter sees that you are trying to see things her way, she might begin to see things your way. We found at this age, the more we push what we want on to our children, the more they push back then run away.
Prayer and trust is what it will take. If she knows you have been spying on her she may run or the anger may be so strong that she acts out in other ways that could lead to her getting hurt. I know this is not much help. I just know once I began to keep an open mind and not judge people until I know them, my daughter and I have built a very strong bond. Her step-dad also has a very strong bond with her now. We may not like what our kids do, who they talk to or what their goals are, we can only love, support and understand them. Honesty, Trust, and an open mind go a long ways when it comes to teenage girls.
T. V