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Dialogues · Crisis

“You read my diary.”

The single most-corrosive privacy violation in the parent–teen relationship. You can't unread it. The recovery is honest, slow, and entirely up to you.


For ages
10–1213–1516–18
Topics
Privacy & SurveillanceLying & TrustFamily Conflict
Family context
Strict HouseholdHigh Conflict Home
I.
The scene

What's happening.

Your teen finds their journal where they didn't leave it. They know. They confront you: “You read my diary.” There's no point lying — and you weren't going to, were you?

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

I was worried about you. As your mother I have a right to know what's going on.

Teen

You don't have a right to my thoughts.

Parent

When you're under my roof, I do.

Teen

(starts hiding everything; stops writing entirely; relationship damaged for years)

III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

Yes. I did. I was scared after [what prompted it] and I went looking for answers, and that was the wrong way to look. I am genuinely sorry — there's no version of that I can defend. I won't do it again.

Teen

You can't just APOLOGIZE and have it be fine.

Parent

You're right. The apology doesn't fix it. The only thing that fixes it is time and me actually keeping my word. I'm going to ask you, in three months and again in six, how you're doing trusting me. And we'll see.

Teen

Whatever.

Parent

I know. I earned that response.

IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

If your teen is in crisis

Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, 24/7) · Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line) · Find a child psychiatrist at aacap.org · For immediate danger, call 911.

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