Not sure that is the case here. After about 5th grade my Dad and I were at fairly constant odds. Mom on the other hand I got along with great. I had long learned that I was not going to win against her and it was not worth trying even if I was too old for corner standing. My oldest sister, 18 months younger than me, had constant struggles with Mom until about the Middle of Jr. HS when things more or less settled in to a truce. It took Dad and I almost 40 years to reach a steady state of truce.
So Liz and Elly might be a case of personalities that don’t gell.
Sometimes it’s easier for a girl that age to talk to someone other than her mother. My mother never actually told me anything. When I was 12, she handed me a box and told me to read the pamphlet. I learned more talking with friends, and on my own than any other way.
So Elly finds this out while pounding away at her typewriter and is sad??? Do I hear the strains of “The Cat’s In The Cradle” from the woman’s perspective playing in the background? Wake up woman – apparently you have chosen your priorities – you snooze and you lose!
Okay, I would feel bad for her, but I know from experience that anything you tell a family member will come back to bite you in the butt when they need leverage sometime in the future. Yes, even Mom.
Anything I told or asked my mother in confidence went straight to my dad within minutes. Her excuse? “We don’t keep secrets from each other.” Living with those two was a nightmare!
the teacher opened the door now she can continue the talk with her daughter about all the changes she will be going through as she starts to enter womanhood.
I remember a comic strip in Mad Magazine years ago where a group of teens is hanging out and one talks about how he had a wonderful conversation with an adult the other day who, unlike his parents, actually listened to him and gave him some really good advice. Another boy says he just had a similar experience. Some one asks who and they point at each other and say, “His father.” followed by, in utter disbelief, “MY FATHER?!?!”
Well, this is humor, so we’re just going to laugh at Ellie’s reaction. When our daughter was growing up, my wife and I always reacted to these situations like Ellie does in panel 3, but we didn’t do panel 4. We were genuinely glad that she had other people to mentor and guide her, and that she was comfortable enough talking to us to keep us in that loop (and, at 26, she still does).
1.) The teacher pulled Elizabeth aside, so she opened up at a time when Elly was not present.
2.) Elly has had a reputation for getting angry and huffy over every little thing. She is not the most approachable parent.
3.) Elly grew up in the 1950s, which was the most prosperous time in North American history. She is bitter that she and John are struggling to make ends meet and are in relative poverty to her parents. She has projected some of that bitterness onto the children.
Templo S.U.D. almost 4 years ago
losing your touch in parenting, aren’t you, El?
littlejohn Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Losing your confide-ability Elly?
KenTheCoffinDweller almost 4 years ago
Not sure that is the case here. After about 5th grade my Dad and I were at fairly constant odds. Mom on the other hand I got along with great. I had long learned that I was not going to win against her and it was not worth trying even if I was too old for corner standing. My oldest sister, 18 months younger than me, had constant struggles with Mom until about the Middle of Jr. HS when things more or less settled in to a truce. It took Dad and I almost 40 years to reach a steady state of truce.
So Liz and Elly might be a case of personalities that don’t gell.
GirlGeek Premium Member almost 4 years ago
The second child to find somebody else to confine in
PammWhittaker almost 4 years ago
Sometimes it’s easier for a girl that age to talk to someone other than her mother. My mother never actually told me anything. When I was 12, she handed me a box and told me to read the pamphlet. I learned more talking with friends, and on my own than any other way.
Enter.Name.Here almost 4 years ago
She can’t tell mom all that stuff…She has to LIVE with her!
Johnnyrico almost 4 years ago
Oh fer Chrisssakes..
cracker65 almost 4 years ago
My oldest is that way. Doesn’t bother me but it does her mother.
dcdete. almost 4 years ago
As they say, like mother like daughter. Panel 3 and 4 seems to imply that the mother has mood swings as well.
Pet almost 4 years ago
Teenage girls will talk to anyone BUT their mother. In my own experience, anyway.
derdave969 almost 4 years ago
Vanessa Baxter syndrome: always wanting to “fix” things that don’t need fixing (or even attention).
43willys almost 4 years ago
So Elly finds this out while pounding away at her typewriter and is sad??? Do I hear the strains of “The Cat’s In The Cradle” from the woman’s perspective playing in the background? Wake up woman – apparently you have chosen your priorities – you snooze and you lose!
well-i-never almost 4 years ago
But she did come to you, and she told you about her day.
mandy052878 almost 4 years ago
I’d rather it be a teacher than a student who might give the wrong advice
Willywise52 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Suck it up,El.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Okay, I would feel bad for her, but I know from experience that anything you tell a family member will come back to bite you in the butt when they need leverage sometime in the future. Yes, even Mom.
Thechildinme almost 4 years ago
Anything I told or asked my mother in confidence went straight to my dad within minutes. Her excuse? “We don’t keep secrets from each other.” Living with those two was a nightmare!
j.l.farmer almost 4 years ago
the teacher opened the door now she can continue the talk with her daughter about all the changes she will be going through as she starts to enter womanhood.
BlitzMcD almost 4 years ago
Life never seems to go the way that a sanctimonious ex-hippie wants it to go.
Cincoflex almost 4 years ago
Maybe Ellie ought to talk with Miss Edwards . . .
Yardley701 almost 4 years ago
You should know by now that outsiders are always easier for kids to talk to, nothing new about this.
howtheduck almost 4 years ago
Looks like Elizabeth is not the only one suffering from depression.
D Gordon Longmuir almost 4 years ago
Is that a “typewriter” she is using?
Asharah almost 4 years ago
I remember a comic strip in Mad Magazine years ago where a group of teens is hanging out and one talks about how he had a wonderful conversation with an adult the other day who, unlike his parents, actually listened to him and gave him some really good advice. Another boy says he just had a similar experience. Some one asks who and they point at each other and say, “His father.” followed by, in utter disbelief, “MY FATHER?!?!”
paullp Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Well, this is humor, so we’re just going to laugh at Ellie’s reaction. When our daughter was growing up, my wife and I always reacted to these situations like Ellie does in panel 3, but we didn’t do panel 4. We were genuinely glad that she had other people to mentor and guide her, and that she was comfortable enough talking to us to keep us in that loop (and, at 26, she still does).
kab2rb almost 4 years ago
That hits really hard, daughter cannot talk with mom.
hagarthehorrible almost 4 years ago
That wailing is understandable. All teens prefer someone else to confide in instead of parents.
oakie817 almost 4 years ago
aw
rebelstrike0 almost 4 years ago
It may have been three possibilities:
1.) The teacher pulled Elizabeth aside, so she opened up at a time when Elly was not present.
2.) Elly has had a reputation for getting angry and huffy over every little thing. She is not the most approachable parent.
3.) Elly grew up in the 1950s, which was the most prosperous time in North American history. She is bitter that she and John are struggling to make ends meet and are in relative poverty to her parents. She has projected some of that bitterness onto the children.