What's happening.
Your 15-year-old, on the porch: “I broke up with Sam tonight. It was the right call but I feel really weird.” You sit down.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
Oh thank god. I never liked them.
Mom!
What? I'm being honest. They weren't good enough for you.
(retreats; learns that mom's relationship-evaluation kicks in the moment a breakup happens)
- “I never liked them” is the parent dancing on the grave of a relationship the teen is still mourning, even if they made the call.
- “They weren't good enough” may be true and lands as judgment of the teen's choice in dating them in the first place.
- Long-term: teens whose parents trash-talked exes don't bring future partners home.
What works — and why.
Okay. Tell me about it — what made it the right call, and what's the weird feeling?
They were getting too possessive. The weird feeling is missing them anyway, even though I know it was right.
Yeah. That's a really mature thing to be able to feel both at once — relief that you ended it AND grief that you have to. Both are real. The grief usually fades faster than you think. Sometimes the relief deepens, sometimes you miss specific things and have to remind yourself why. Both totally normal. I'm proud of you for making the call.
- Asking what made it the right call AND what the weird feeling is treats it as a complex grown-up event, which it is.
- “That's a really mature thing to be able to feel both at once” validates the dual experience instead of insisting on one.
- “Proud of you for making the call” without trashing the ex is the dignity-preserving move for everyone.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Tell me about it — what made it the right call, and what's the weird feeling?
- That's a really mature thing to be able to feel both at once.
- Relief that you ended it AND grief that you have to. Both are real.
- I'm proud of you for making the call.