What's happening.
Your 17-year-old, on the walk after dinner: “I've been thinking about it. I want to enlist.” You feel multiple things at once.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
Absolutely not. You're going to college.
I already met with the recruiter. He said —
Recruiters lie. End of conversation.
(stops including you in the decision; signs up at 18 without your input)
- Forbidding a major life decision the teen has clearly been working on for months guarantees they'll make it without you.
- “Recruiters lie” is partly true and conversationally fatal — you've dismissed the teen's months of thinking as gullibility.
- At 17 you have a window of influence. Threatening it ends it.
What works — and why.
Okay. That's a big decision. Walk me through it — what's pulling you toward it, what branch, what role, and how long have you been thinking about it?
About a year. I want Air Force, cybersecurity track. The training and the GI Bill at the end. I don't want $200k of college debt for a degree I might not use.
Okay. That's not impulse, that's a plan. I have feelings about it because you're my kid and you're going to be 17 in a uniform — but my feelings don't decide. Here's what I'd want, as your parent and as someone who loves you: before you sign, we go to two more recruiters from different services to compare contracts; we have an independent person (not a recruiter) read whatever you sign, because the small print matters; and we talk to two people who've actually done what you want to do — one current, one who's been out for five years. After all of that, the decision is yours. Workable?
Yeah. Workable. Thank you for not flipping out.
- Asking for the plan honors that they've been thinking about it — which they have.
- Naming your feelings without overriding their decision (“my feelings don't decide”) is the parental subtlety they need to see at 17.
- The three protective conditions (compare recruiters, independent reader, talk to people in + people out) are reasonable parent diligence that doesn't override agency.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- That's a big decision. Walk me through it — what's pulling you toward it, what branch, what role.
- That's not impulse, that's a plan.
- I have feelings because you're my kid. But my feelings don't decide.
- Before you sign — [compare recruiters, independent reader, talk to people who've done it].