What's happening.
Tuesday morning. Your 15-year-old, on the way out: “Can I cut last period today? Like, you write me a note?” You stop pouring coffee.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
Absolutely not. I'm not writing a fake note.
It's just one class.
Get to school.
(parent missed that the ASK was the disclosure — there's a reason. Now they cut without the note, or they go and shut down.)
- Flat refusal without 'why' misses that asking the parent first is itself the disclosure they probably can't articulate.
- “I'm not writing a fake note” treats the ask as a lie request, when it might be a help request in disguise.
- Long-term: teens who get refused before being asked stop asking, and just cut.
What works — and why.
Maybe. Why last period specifically — what's going on?
It's gym. Coach has been calling on me to demo in front of everyone and I'm dreading it.
Okay, that's not 'cut class,' that's 'I'm having a real moment with a specific teacher and I need help.' Two options — one, I write a real note saying you're not feeling well and need to skip just gym today, and we talk about whether to talk to coach this week; two, you go to gym and we figure out the coach thing after. Which one feels right?
...the first one. Just today. And then we talk to coach.
Done.
- “Why last period specifically” gets the actual situation in one question.
- Renaming 'cut class' as 'real moment with a specific teacher' lets the actual issue surface.
- Offering both options + letting them pick respects their pace AND solves the underlying problem.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Maybe. Why [that period] specifically — what's going on?
- That's not 'cut class,' that's '[the actual issue].'
- Two options — [skip with real note] or [go through it]. Which feels right?
- Done.