What's happening.
Your 14-year-old, sitting cross-legged on your bed: “Mom. I'm really worried about Lily. She's been acting different.” The “different” is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
Different how? What's she doing? Are you safe?
Like just sad. And she's been canceling on me a lot.
That's probably nothing. Just teenager stuff. Maybe she's busy.
(decides their gut feeling about a friend is unreliable; stops escalating concerns to you)
- Triple-questioning at the start (“different how, what's she doing, are you safe”) overwhelms the disclosure with intake.
- “Just teenager stuff” dismisses both the friend's situation AND the teen's intuition. Teens are usually pretty accurate intuitive readers of their friends.
- Long-term: the teen stops trusting their own read on social situations because mom dismissed it.
What works — and why.
Okay. Tell me what 'different' is — what are you noticing that's making you worried?
She's been canceling on me. She doesn't eat lunch anymore. And her Instagram has gotten really dark — like, sad-girl quote reposts at 2am.
That's a real pattern, not nothing. Your gut is right to worry. Couple of options — you can reach out to her directly tomorrow with something low-pressure like 'I miss you, want to grab a coffee, no pressure if not.' Or, if you think the situation is more serious than that, we can talk about reaching out to her parents. What does your gut say?
I think the first one. I want to give her a chance to talk to me first.
That sounds wise. Let me know how it goes. And if she opens up about anything that scares you, you and I figure out the next step together.
- “Your gut is right to worry” validates the teen's read on their friend, which is usually accurate.
- Offering scaled responses (low-pressure outreach vs. involving the other parents) lets the teen choose proportionate action.
- “Let me know how it goes” keeps the loop open, which is when the more serious disclosure actually arrives.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Tell me what 'different' is — what are you noticing?
- That's a real pattern, not nothing. Your gut is right to worry.
- Options: low-pressure outreach, or talking to her parents. What does your gut say?
- If she opens up about anything that scares you, you and I figure out the next step together.