My Child Doesn’t Want to Live with Her Mom
October 15, 2018
Children need to have positive relationships with both parents even if the child prefers one parent over the other. (2 minutes 13 seconds read)

Dr. Jann Blackstone

Dear Dr. Jann,

My 14-year-old daughter lives with me most of the time.  She has told her mother that she loves her and wants to see her, but doesn’t want to live with her.  I want to support my daughter but I feel that she needs a relationship with her mother. How do I handle this?


Tell her what you just told me — because you are right, a child needs a positive relationship with both parents. Don’t let this go to your head. A lot of different things could be playing into this change of events:

  1. When she’s with mom she loves it there and tells Mom she wants to live with her. When she’s with dad she loves it there and tells Dad the same thing. Both parents believe her and so they about where their daughter really wants to live. Truth is, the child is telling the truth. She probably wants to live with both parents.
  1. Poor communication between parents. One house is more lenient than the other. Child knows the parents don’t compare notes and is gravitating to the more lenient home. Be careful, when this happens kids play their parents against each other. “Dad doesn’t make me do that.” Check with Dad or you’ll never know.
  1. When a child turns anywhere between 10-14 and has been raised predominantly by one parent, it’s not uncommon for him or her to gravitate to the other parent’s home. It’s usually children gravitate to the like-gendered parent, but not always. The problem here is if things don’t go the way the child expects, he or she often begins a campaign to return to the other parent.  Things can get really miserable if you don’t nip this one in the bud.
  1. The “other” parent may have been painted as the “refuge parent.” When things got tough, the child was not been taught to address the issue, it has been, “Go see your dad for a while and cool down.” She’s doing what you taught her to do.

It’s important to note that your daughter is not telling you its mom’s house or dad’s house, she’s saying she wants a relationship with her mother, she just wants to live with you most of the time. That’s a red flag. Figure out why. The best plan is to sit down with mom, compare notes, don’t take things too personally and really look for what’s best for your daughter at this time in her life.When you decide, present it to your daughter as a united front. Never make her choose.

Written by Dr. Jann Blackstone

Dr. Jann Blackstone specializes in divorce, child custody, co-parenting, and stepfamily mediation and is often called the “Relationship Expert for Today’s Relationships” because of her “real life, down-to-earth” approach to relationship problem solving. She is the author of six books on divorce and parenting, the most popular, the Ex-etiquette series featuring Ex-etiquette for Parents: Good Behavior After Divorce or Separation. She is also the author of the Ex-etiquette syndicated column and a frequent guest or consultant on television and radio talk shows, including Good Morning America (ABC), The Today Show (NBC), Keeping Kids Healthy (PBS), the Early Show (CBS), and The Oprah Winfrey Show. She has been the featured expert in many magazines, including, Child, Parents, Parenting, Newsweek, Family Circle, More, Good Housekeeping, Redbook, BRIDES, Woman’s Day, and Working Mother Magazine. In 1999, Dr. Jann founded and became the first Director of Bonus Families®, a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization working to change the way society views stepfamilies by supplying up-to-date co-parenting information via its Web site, counseling, mediation, and a worldwide support group network. They prefer to use the word “bonus” to the word step. Step implies negative things; however, a “bonus” is a reward for a job well done. “Bonus…a step in the right direction.”

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