10 Signs Your Child or Grandchild is Involved In an Abusive or Toxic 'Friendship' and Tips on How to Help

10 Tips: How to help our kids and ourselves manage toxic friends

September 26, 2011
10 Tips for Handling Toxic Friends and BulliesSource: Getty Images

Tips on handling bullies and toxic friends -- for our kids, grandkids and ourselves

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One of the many benefits of being a parent or grandparent is that you can learn – or re-learn – all kinds of new skills you think are only for the kids but they end up helping you, too.

For example, the category of bullying, bullies, mean girls, and toxic friends is one of the hottest topics for parents, grandparents, and mental health professionals who work with kids and educators.

There is a lot of advice out there. I like the simplicity and thoughtfulness of advice from expert Mary Jo Rapini and thought I'd share it. As I read through it I saw so many similarities in how child bullies behave with how adult bullies behave. If you read these signs and advice through the lens of an adult in at work, in the PTA, in our own families and friendships, you see clearly what happens to some of these children when they group up. They become adult bullies.

Getting Our Kids and Ourselves out of Abusive Friendships

So, in the name of prevention, I offer these tips from Mary Jo Rapini, a licensed psychotherapist, who writes regularly about these issues. My hope is that by identifying these patterns and discussing the solutions with our children, we can also do the same for ourselves. To read more, check out her website.

Your Child's Toxic Friendships

by Mary Jo Rapini, MEd, LPC

"10 Tips your child or grandchild may be involved with a toxic friend:

  1. If your child becomes totally obsessed with pleasing this friend, there is a good chance the power balance has shifted and your child is being used.
  2. If your child's friend treats their parent or any adult with disdain, pay attention. This is not a good sign as they have issues with authority.
  3. Your child's new friend doesn't abide by your child's rules. For example, if you tell your child no communicating after 9 p.m. and this friend continually calls or texts, saying rules are stupid or for little kids, this is not a friendship you want to nurture.
  4. Your child is teased or belittled in any way by this friend.
  5. The friend tries to get your child to act rude or disobedient at school.
  6. The friend wants to keep secrets all the time.
  7. Your child's friend is rude in public. All kids make mistakes, but if you notice this kid is a brat in public, can you imagine what is going on in their home?
  8. Your child's friend picks on "lesser people" or has a bully attitude.
  9. Your child's new friend has angry outbursts.
  10. Your child begins acting out, swearing, and acting belligerent or indignant (unless someone is modeling that behavior in your home).

5 Tips on how to help your children break free of toxic or abusive friendships:

  • Begin by having the toxic friend over for dinner (it is even better if the parents can come). Usually you don't need to do more; the whole situation becomes very clear to your child.
  • Talk with your child about their toxic friend's behavior only. Try not to attack the friend, but say what you see and why it is unappealing. Be honest and firm with your observations.
  • Structure your child's life as much as possible. Your child will need an excuse at times and if they are able to say, "My parents will ground me for life or take my car away if I do that," it helps them save face.
  • Set limits. Keep your child's curfew and follow through with consequences. If your child begins suffering for their toxic friend, they may wake up sooner rather than later, asking why they like this person who gets them into trouble.
  • Many times your child will choose to hang out with someone you don't like as a form of rebellion. If depression, anger, or acting out become an issue, it is wise to seek counseling for your child as well as yourself. Toxic friends have the power to turn a once harmonious family into a chaotic situation very quickly."

In future posts I will share more expert advice and excellent resources on how to manage difficult friendships.

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Anonymous | Mar 7, 2012
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Anonymous | Mar 3, 2012
casi I don't know how important hair is for black loeppe and can't understand it. It's hair lol. But i respect it and wont comment.But I have to comment on the way you think that there's been a change on Z hair and that you think Angelina change the way she did her kid hair because of loeppe talking. lol1)There has been no change on the way Z hair is done in the last year. It's still done in 1 or 2 ponytails like always. The only difference is that Z now has more hair and she wont take it off like she did when she was younger. Her hair always looked cared for, healthy and clean.2)They have black loeppe working with them since 2006/2007. Angelina talked about them.3)Even if Angelina was aware of the hair talk you think Angelina cares about what loeppe think on the way she does or not does her kids hair? Really you believe that? lol She is aware, because she has talk about it, the talk about Shi dressing like a boy . Did you see Angelina force a dress on Shi? She does what she thinks is right, not what other loeppe think.That's one of the things that made me an Angelina fan. She never cared about what others think. She lives her life on her own terms and she does what she thinks is right.4)It bothers me when loeppe try to impose their believes, their ideas, their ways etc to other loeppe. I don't care if it's a race issue or if it's important to the loeppe of that race, Z is not their kid. Maybe you (as a race) should be questioning why hair is so important and not if someone's else kids has the hair the way you think is right?It's the same with traveling and not being in one place, or not being married, or Shi dressing etc Each family is unique and only the loeppe on the family know whats best for them, as individuals and a group.Do what you think it's right with your kids and your family, let other loeppe do what they think is right with theirs.
Anonymous | Sep 30, 2011
Great, nice post, I was wondering the same thing and found your site by Google, learned a lot and now I have got some idea. I've bookmark your site. Keep us updated. online ged programs

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