Dialogues · Heated

“Can I cut just one class? Just today?”

The minor truancy ask. Usually for a specific reason: anxiety, a friend, a date. The reflex to refuse; the work is to find out why.

Line art of a teen at a kitchen table, parent across, morning light
For ages
10–1213–1516–18
Topics
School & GradesMental HealthCommunication & Connection
Teen profile
Socially Isolated
I.
The scene

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.

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

Absolutely not. I'm not writing a fake note.

Teen

It's just one class.

Parent

Get to school.

Teen

(parent missed that the ASK was the disclosure — there's a reason. Now they cut without the note, or they go and shut down.)

III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

Maybe. Why last period specifically — what's going on?

Teen

It's gym. Coach has been calling on me to demo in front of everyone and I'm dreading it.

Parent

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?

Teen

...the first one. Just today. And then we talk to coach.

Parent

Done.

IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

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