When a mother set limits on her daughter’s screen time, she never anticipated the emotional fallout. What started as a straightforward boundary soon turned into a growing divide between them. But this isn’t really about screens—it’s about understanding teenage grief, the instincts we rely on to cope, and learning how to communicate without breaking the bond of trust.
Here’s her story
My teenage daughter is glued to her phone 24/7. So I made a new rule: one hour of phone time a day. She didn’t take it well. “You’ll regret this!” she cried.
Last week, I got an urgent call from her school. Her teacher said, “Please come. Your daughter is in the principal’s office.” I rushed over.
Turns out, she’d been caught using a phone in class—browsing TikTok during a lecture. “But I have her phone,” I said. They showed it to me.
It was a different phone, definitely not the one I confiscated. She’d gotten it from a classmate who had a spare and had been hiding it in her locker.
When we got home, I confronted her. She didn’t even deny it. “You don’t understand!” she snapped. “My friends are everything! You cut me off from everyone!”I said, “You lied. You broke school rules. And you went behind my back.”
She cried. I stayed calm, but inside, I was boiling. Not just from the disobedience, but because I felt like I didn’t even know her anymore. I ended up grounding her.
But I worry it’s not solving the real problem—just making it worse. Now, every time I try to talk to her, she looks at me like I’m the enemy. What shall I do now?