J.L.
Not meaning to be harsh, but your post is the fourth plea of this kind I have seen/heard in the last week. I guess my thought is, why are so many parents "afraid" to tell their kids "NO"? Why are so many parents afraid to take control over who their kids associate with, or have a say as to how they spend their free time? Aren't they still minors, in your charge until they are legally an adult? YOU need to guide them, tell them what is right and wrong, help them make the right decisions. You can't leave them to do this on their own. When kids are sheltered with no guidance and then sent out into the world blindly, THAT is when kids go "hog wild" as a previous poster argued. Kids who have been guided and given reasons why something is a bad idea versus just sheltered, are the ones who learn to navigate around trouble. There is a big difference between sheltering and just blindly assuming a child can fend for themselves because you avoided situtations during their formative years. They need guidance from a parent..not their peers.
THIS in my opinion is THE time to be involved in your child's life, more than any other time. They do not have the maturity to reason well or make wise decisions as much as so many parents believe or mistakenly assume. They simply do not have enough life experience to do so. That is why they have parents. We DO know and sadly many of us HAVE made life changing mistakes.
With that said, I'm always discouraged to see so many parents, especially mothers, who refuse to get involved, put their foot down, or steer their child's interest in such a way that they'll be saved from life changing mistakes for the rest of their lives.
This isn't about whether you can trust your child or not...or whether they don't understand or know better. It's a battle for the will of your child. Simply put, if you don't parent and create boundaries, their band of lost soul peers will do it for you. The minute you let your child run mindlessly with their friends (most who also have parents who have thrown in the towel offering boundaries and guidance-- trusting that their kids know better than to get into trouble) they are gone. Giving up now is to tantamount to you giving up any and all parental authority during a crucial time in your child's life. Do not expect them to listen or respect you anymore, even if you continue to pay their cell phone bills, car payments and car insurance. Their new family...the people they will go to for advice, direction and to form their conscience and values will be their misguided and often unparented peers. It will be YOU who is cut out of the picture forever.
I know many seeing this will say harsh, unrealistic, whatever...but I've seen enough now to know, this is reality. Parents today have only one choice with their tween (it starts that early) and teen children: to accept or go against the norm of giving them unlimited freedom, resources and adult status before they're emotionally and financially prepared for it, and actually and truly parent your child through high school and college IF possible by setting boundaries, expectations and if necessary removing them from situations and people that will ruin their lives in the end.
Parents need to stop being afraid of dealing with an angry child, or afraid of what others will think or say about their parenting style....All of this negative talk about "helicopter parenting" and "Tiger Mothers" in lieu of "Free Range Parenting" boils down to what is a cultural war of sorts with parental roles at the center. Kids will continue to spiral as long as parents continue to give up their rights as parents as soon as a child is old enough to sass back.
If you are worried about your child getting mixed up with the wrong crowd, remove her from the situation. You reprioritized your finances by moving into a smaller home. Respectfully I ask, `what about reprioritizing how you are going to parent?' If I were in your shoes (which interestingly I have a dear friend in your shoes right now...her husband is in law enforcement as well) I'd pull your child out of that school and put her into a private school or somewhere where she'll come in contact with people and an environment that jives your values and parenting style. I'd get her involved in worthwhile activities she CAN participate in, and steer her toward kids and families that share your values before it's too late.
Sure she'll complain, and say she hates you. But that's because thankfully, nothing life changing has happend to her yet and maturity hasn't set in. Your goal now should be to keep it that way...no life changing tragedies or mistakes. Years from now, when you both get past this difficult time where she thinks approval from a bunch of loser friends headed no where is so important, she'll be thankful as she watches them one by one meet their fate as failures in love, career and life because they depended on other misguided kids for guidance or worse didn't have parents who cared enough to set them straight.
All I can say is do not be afraid to set boundaries. Not because your husband is in law enforcement, but because your daughter's future happiness and life depend on it. How will you feel if she winds up in an abusive marriage, on drugs, in an accident, with a criminal record or worse, with no options for a future because she wasted her best academic years trying to get the approval of people who in the end won't matter. She should be focused on worthwhile endeavors right now...endeavors like making herself the best, well rounded, centered person she can be. School should be priority not a social life.
Jobs are scarce and the signs are around us that only the cream of the crop will be lucky enough to get a mediocre job unless the economy turns around. Why even second guess yourself by agreeing to let her throw her life away to avoid teen angst and a fight. While ultimately, once she is out of the house she could still make bad choices, I say don't let the bad choices happen under your watch. You have a mission. Stick to it and be tough and save her from herself so she can have a shot a better future. You'll at the very least be able to sleep at night knowing no matter what, you did the right thing by doing your part as her mother...regardless of her future choices once she's out of the house.