Your Troublesome Daughter Is Coming Home Past Curfew, Creative Ways To Teach Her A Lesson

Your Troublesome Daughter Is Coming Home Past Curfew, Creative Ways To Teach Her A Lesson

Raising teen daughters sure isn’t easy. You are bound to get angry and frustrated as your teen pushes boundaries in her quest for more freedom and independence. One area that’s sure to cause friction is a curfew.

A teen’s curfew should be carefully set and completely enforced from the beginning. Discuss the curfew hours with your daughter and let her have a say in the consequences she should face for breaking them. Also, explain why a curfew is important and that you have legitimate reasons to worry whenever she stays out too long or comes home late.

If your daughter forms a habit of missing curfew and becomes immune to the discipline measures you agreed on, it’s time to come up with something more creative to grab her attention.

Here are some innovative ways to teach her a lesson:

  • Develop a roll-back system. This one is basic but pretty effective. Every time your daughter comes home later than agreed, make her new curfew an hour earlier for the following week. If she’s still late again within that week, roll back the hours for the next two weeks and so on.
  • Become her chauffeur and babysitter. Parents normally withdraw driving privileges as punishment for their teens. Go a step further and chauffeur or babysit your daughter everywhere she needs to go. If she plans to hang out with her friends after school, go with her and wait her out. The pain of having her freedom withdrawn coupled with the embarrassment of having her mom in tow wherever she goes will make her reconsider her ways.
  • Interrupt her fun. Another great way to enforce a curfew and stress its importance is to show up where your teen is when she’s late coming home. Most teens would rather die than have their parents waltz into a party at 12 A.M. to take them back home. Do this once, and your daughter will have enough incentive to keep her curfew in future.
  • Enlist her unwitting friends’ help. For this to work, ensure you have the real phone numbers of a couple of your daughter’s friends. Once calls and texts to your daughter go unanswered, start texting and calling her friends. Your daughter is sure to respond and pay more attention to you after this, if only to avoid you following up on her.
  • Ground her, but with a twist. If your teen seems immune to being grounded, up the ante by drawing up a chores contract and make her earn a certain number of points to get un-grounded. Preparing dinner could earn her 50 points, for example, and cleaning out the oven or microwave could be worth 40 points. This way, you pass a message and get a clean house too.

While bringing up your teen daughter can be challenging, a continuous pattern of defiance and rebellion towards authority could point to a much deeper problem. Contact Help Your Teen Now and we’ll help you find a suitable solution to get her back on a positive path.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

31 Aug, 2017

Recent Posts

The Good and Bad of Viral Challenges

The Good and Bad of Viral Challenges

Viral challenges. What words and ideas come to your mind when you hear those words? Viral challenges have a reputation of being either completely good or bad. In this article, you’ll learn about the viral challenges common nowadays, the pros and cons of these...

Negative Thinking Patterns: Magnifying and Minimizing

Negative Thinking Patterns: Magnifying and Minimizing

“I hear a thousand kind words about me And it makes no difference Yet I hear one insult And all confidence shatters. -focusing on the negative” --Rupi Kaur in her book of poems The Sun and Her Flowers. In Rupi Kaur’s book of poems The Sun and Her Flowers, she centers...

Negative Thinking Patterns: Labelling & Personalization

Negative Thinking Patterns: Labelling & Personalization

Negative Thinking Patterns: Labelling & Personalization “If you have secretly longed for significance, the journey does not begin out there in the world, But deep within, where you embrace Your honest self.” --Morgan Harper Nichols in her book of poems, All Along...

Negative Thinking Patterns: Fortune Telling

Negative Thinking Patterns: Fortune Telling

“The only thing that truly matters Is how often you say On your journey, “This, all of this, is for me.” -- Nikita Gill in her book of poems, Wild Embers: Poems of Rebellion, Fire, and Beauty As Nikita Gill points out in her book of poems that center on mental health...

Negative Thinking Patterns: All Or Nothing

Negative Thinking Patterns: All Or Nothing

“You’re a rainbow my love,Their sky is too clouded with darknessFor them to see your colors.”--Pierre Alex Jeanty in his book of poems Her. This article will help you understand some of the behaviors that the All or Nothing negative thought pattern can trigger in your...

You May Also Like…

At What Age Should a Teen Date?

At What Age Should a Teen Date?

The word ‘dating’ sends parental anxiety skyrocketing when teens explore their newfound freedom and discover...

Helping Your Teen Learn Manners

Helping Your Teen Learn Manners

The future of a friendly, considerate teen with good manners will benefit greatly from your efforts to teach them good...

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *