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Dear Jean: I have a 15 year old boy (soon
to be 16) and Jean responds: Hi, Making a stepfamily work is a really hard job. People underrate what's involved. It sounds as if you and this boy's stepfather have done your very best to support him in living a decent life and have loved each other and him. But as young people go through adolescence, they do experience a surge of energy in two general directions: towards becoming independent of parents and towards finding out who they are, and it can happen suddenly. It sounds as if your son is experiencing his surges of energy in these areas now. Because you are still responsible for his behavior, legally, and morally responsible for his welfare until he is 18, you cannot allow him to go live with his father if his father will be abusive to him or grossly irresponsible (i.e., drinking all the time and totally unable to supervise him or conducting illegal activities in the home). However, barring these possibilities, I think you are wise to let him have a chance to live with his biological dad and see what it's like. It's important that you also carefully avoid saying anything bad about his biological father, since his dad is biologically and psychologically a "piece" of your son. In this way, your son's relationship with his father is different from your relationship with this exhusband. The more your son can respect him, the better for his own self esteem. Your son may not be able to give you sound reasons for wanting to move because teenagers may not be aware of motivations like wanting to find their identity or wanting to feel more like an adult. They just ACT on those things, most of the time. I would tell your son that his lying about his stepfather and you hurts your feelings. Period. Don't dwell on this. And it's important that you and his stepfather try not to indulge any feelings of your own of being "done to" by this boy's insistence on seeing if he can establish a home with his father. Frankly, your good support of him ALLOWS him to be strong enough to insist on doing what he feels like he must. He is NOT betraying you! - he is doing what he is developmentally driven to do. If it doesn't work out with his father, pity him because he then finds out that he has a father who cannot be a father to him, and this is a very sad fact. Take him back home and sit down with him and establish limits in areas of behavior that have been problematic, and assign consequences for the next infringement of these limits, so that the next time he steps over the line in a behavioral area he knows exactly what consequence will be coming (behavioral areas do NOT include lying or attitude, just stuff like hours, skipping school, or whatever behavior actions he is having problems with). Hope this helps a little;see also the Recommended Reading, below. Jean.
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