What's happening.
Your 15-year-old, on the porch: “Mom. I think I'm in love with Sam. And Sam doesn't see me that way at all.” You sit down.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
Oh sweetheart. Just tell them how you feel. The worst they can say is no.
The worst they can say is yes and then we date and break up and I lose my best friend.
You're catastrophizing. It'll be fine either way.
Forget it. You don't get it.
- “Just tell them how you feel” is the parent reaching for a quick fix to a feeling that doesn't have one.
- “The worst they can say is no” trivializes a real social-graph cost — the teen identified it accurately and you dismissed it.
- “You're catastrophizing” is the parent labeling a real emotion as a thinking error. Closes the conversation.
What works — and why.
Oh. That's one of the hardest ones. Tell me what it's like right now — being around them, not being around them, all of it.
It's like I'm two people. The friend who's normal and the person who feels like crying after every hangout.
That sounds exhausting. Doing nothing has its own cost; saying something has its own cost. Neither one is the obvious right answer. What do YOU think you want to do?
Honestly… I think I want to hold it for now. See if it fades or if it grows. And not lose the friendship by acting fast.
That sounds wise. And whatever you decide later, I'll be here.
- “That's one of the hardest ones” validates without preaching — the teen leaves the conversation feeling like an adult who's been heard.
- Asking what they want to do (instead of advising) treats them as capable of their own decision, which they are.
- “Whatever you decide later, I'll be here” is the door-open promise without an agenda — exactly what unrequited-love needs from a parent.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Oh. That's one of the hardest ones.
- Tell me what it's like right now — all of it.
- Doing nothing has its own cost; saying something has its own cost. Neither one is the obvious right answer.
- What do YOU think you want to do?