What's happening.
After Sunday dinner. Your 13-year-old: “Grandma is so annoying. She keeps asking me about my weight.” You wince — you've noticed but never said anything.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
She's from a different generation. Just smile and nod.
Why do I have to smile and nod about something rude?
She means well. Don't be ungrateful.
(internalizes that adults defending other adults beats validating the teen)
- “Different generation” is the universal cover for not addressing actual behavior. Other generations also know that commenting on weight is harmful.
- “Just smile and nod” teaches the teen to absorb hurtful comments without recourse — a skill they'll then use everywhere, including in dating relationships.
- “Don't be ungrateful” is the parent prioritizing not-rocking-the-extended-family-boat over their child's dignity. The teen logs it.
What works — and why.
Yeah. That is annoying. I should have said something months ago — I'm going to talk to her about it before next Sunday.
Really? You'll actually say something?
Yes. The 'how's your weight' line is from a different era and it's not okay. I'll be kind about it but clear. Separately — when she does say something cringey, here's a line you can use without being rude: 'Grandma, I love you, that's not a question I'm taking right now.' Then change the subject. Want to practice?
Heh. Yeah. Let me try.
- “I should have said something months ago” owns the parental failure to intervene. The teen feels seen AND protected, which is the rare combination.
- Committing to the call before next Sunday is concrete — it converts complaint into action with a deadline.
- Giving them a script for the moment (“Grandma, I love you, that's not a question I'm taking right now”) is the meta-skill they'll use in every uncomfortable adult interaction for the rest of their life.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Yeah. That is annoying.
- I should have said something months ago — I'll talk to [relative] before [next event].
- Here's a line you can use: '[Relative], I love you, that's not a question I'm taking right now.'
- Want to practice?