Category Archives for "Teens"

How to stop thinking about someone who’s great

Cookie Vidal asks: I just got back from camp and I can’t stop thinking about this super cute guy that I met there! How do I stop thinking about him?

Hi Cookie Vidal –

Why?

Why would you want to stop thinking about him?  If he’s that great, enjoy it!  Do you need to concentrate more?  If so, I can send you some suggestions for that.  Or do you have a boyfriend who might get jealous from you thinking about another boy this much?  Maybe I can help with that.

 

But in the meantime — I smelled some barbecued ribs yesterday, and am still thinking about how great they smelled, and I hope I still am tomorrow!  Handsome’s a bit annoyed that I’m drooling on everything, but other than that, having that “object of desire” in my brain is GREAT!

 

Cheers,

Shirelle

 

 

Should you date a player?

Mandhie asks: There is this guy in my school who is in the same year as me. The first day I got to the school and saw him, I had a crush on him – and I think he did too, because I noticed him staring at me. Because he is so cute, handsome, tall, and has all the features of a good-looking guy, a lot of girls like him. So far, he’s dated like four of my friends that I know; but since he saw me, he has been trying to ignore his current girlfriend (and my year group teases us both). At times, he smiles to me when they tease us, but I feel too shy to return a smile because I don’t want anything to happen between his current girlfriend and me. Now, apparently, his current girlfriend is dating another guy in the school, so my crush is happy about it and is kind of trying to get into my way, but I don’t like that idea. Though I like him, I don’t like the fact that he has dated a lot of girls and wants to date me too, because I’m not the kind of girl who doesn’t care when they are dumped in a relationship. Also, I have never dated before and have no experience. What should I do?

Hi Mandhie –

Wow, this is a great story!  Handsome likes to watch all these complex shows on TV like the one about the big old house in England, or the one about the ad agency, and this sounds like them!

And in one of those shows, you would be the heroine.

Okay, first of all, as I’ve said on here a lot, there is nothing wrong with Continue reading

How to treat friends who aren’t telling you everything

fourcats asks: I sent you a question about ignorance from friends, and I did what you told me, but they say there is no reason for their distance. I am scared that I will fall in trouble for a thing that I haven’t done. I saw those friends talking with our teacher about a problem, and I think that might be the reason for their behavior. How can I know whether this is my mistake or a misunderstanding about me? And how can I be friends with them again?

Hi four cats –

 

 

I am only a dog.  I have no way of knowing what your friends are thinking or feeling, or what anyone said to your teacher.

 

But here’s the funny thing.  At least for right now, neither do you.

 

Yep, that’s what I said.  You have no idea of what’s going on.  Maybe your friends are blaming you for something horrible that someone else did.  Or maybe not.  Maybe you’re in huge trouble with the teacher.  Or maybe not.  Maybe your friends have actively decided to ignore you because they are furious with you.

 

Or maybe not.

 

So here’s the weird thing about situations like this:  You can Continue reading

How to know how to take others’ judgments on your appearance

prettyndsweet12 asks: I’ve been having insecurity issues. I feel like I’m fat, but my mom says I’m not. Is she just saying that because she’s my mom or does she mean it? Also a lot of the kids call me ugly. I don’t think I am, but I am also wondering, if I’m pretty, why don’t boys like me?

Hi prettyndsweet12 –

 

 

The whole issue of when someone is “fat” or not is a really tough one.  Although health experts have ideals they push, saying that a person who’s a certain height should weigh a certain amount, those numbers are never perfect.  Some people have heavier density in their bodies – I don’t know what it is exactly; their bones weigh more than other people’s, or their organs do.  Something like that.

 

Then, you get the issue that different people have different ideas of what a body should look like (especially female bodies).  Probably no woman in the last century has been so idealized as Marilyn Monroe.  But her figure would be considered “fat” by a lot of people today.  And those people often idolize models who are unhealthily underweight (or who aren’t, but their photographs are altered to make them look that way!).

 

Now, to add to my confusion, you ask me if your mother is telling you the truth or not.  My friend, I have absolutely no idea!  Maybe your friends are being purposely mean and actually think you look fine.  Maybe they have unrealistic ideas of what your body should look like.  Maybe your mother loves you so much that she’ll always see you as perfect no matter what.  Or maybe, yes, she’s lying to make you feel better.  I have no way of knowing.

 

What I do know, however, is one thing:  The Continue reading

1 How to deal with parents who are addicts

kaylanicole asks: My best friend, who is my stepmom’s niece (so technically my cousin now), and I have been close for years. She’s just spent nine days with her sister, who hates me. Now one minute she’s telling me to “**** off,” and the next saying “I love you.” She has a lot going on too, because her parents are constantly doing drugs and she’s had a rough life, but I always try to be here for her. We have been arguing on and off and it really hurts. I don’t want to lose her or stop talking to her, because I’m already stressed enough (My mom is on pills and heroin real bad and I’m scared she will die soon because she won’t get any help, and my grandma who raised me is in bad health, and my papaw who also raised me passed a year ago). I recently moved out of my grandma’s house because of stress/depression, but now I have it just as bad here. I always feel bad because my grandma tries to get me to move back in and tells me how she needs help and stuff. My nana has Crohn’s disease and is really skinny and in terrible shape. I told my best friend that I have a lot going on. She is one of the people that means the most to me and I just don’t know what to do. She will bring up her sister’s BF’s sister to make me jealous, and she changed her cover photo on Facebook to them, which used to be us most the time. I feel so alone and replaced, and most nights I lay in bed and cry until I’m tired. The depression/stress is taking over.

Hi kaylanicole –

 

 

This is one of the most heartbreaking letters I’ve ever received.  I get mail all the time that tells of pain, heartbreak, or frustration, and I’m usually able to keep my tail wagging and come up with cheerful fun ways to help those people out.  But after reading your letter, I had to go outside and give a big mournful yowl.

 

It’s not that your situation is impossible.  It’s just that it’s so sad.  Both you and your best friend are suffering with parents who are drug addicts.  And that is one of the toughest situations any kid can live in.

 

Now before any readers jump in to say, “Hey, I saw my dad Continue reading

Can youngsters manage their anger?

AudreyKimberly146 asks: I am an eleven years old kid and I’m not an ordinary girl. I cook if I want, but I have a disease that makes my family the victim. This is strange, but seriously I can’t control my emotions! If somebody hurts me at school, I’ll be angry, but I usually still have a heart attached to my body, and just can be quiet (though if I get upset enough, it’s more like an earthquake!). I don’t wanna see any of my friends hurt because of me. But at home, I will hit a surface of a table and yell bad words to my siblings. So now I’m wondering if I can say something that will not hurt anybody. (I take this from a cartoon named “The Amazing World of Gumball”) So, I just have to say ” I have a stupid brain, in a stupid head, with a stupid mind, packed in a stupid personality if I get angry “. That way, I think I would be able to relieve myself every time I get angry. Now, what do I want to ask is, with this way, will everything be alright?

Hi AudreyKimberly146 –

 

 

I’m very very impressed with you, AudreyKimberly146.  What you’re doing is something called Anger Management.  There are psychologists all over the world who specialize in this, who run classes for teenagers and adults who are unable to control their rage.  Sometimes these are people like you who get upset for legitimate reasons, but lose control over their actions.  Sometimes, though, it can be worse – for example, a parent who loses their temper because their baby is crying, or because their puppy pooped indoors, things that no one has any Continue reading

What’s Shirelle’s life like?

aana asks: Which continent are you from? Where are you living at the moment? Are you married? What’s your age?

Hi aana –

 

Thanks for all your questions about me.

 

I currently live in North America, near the west coast of the United States, pretty close to Los Angeles.  I’ve been a lot of places around this country, and my ancestors, I believe (no one’s sure of my breed, but based on some people’s best guesses) come from Siberia and the Arabian Desert.

 

Dogs can’t marry, but I do have a Continue reading

How to make an absent-minded teenager take responsibility

Cookie Vidal asks: I have a hard time getting my 16-year-old brother to do all my dog’s things (pick up her feces, change her water etc.), and for the last 6 months or so I have been doing it for him. He stays home all day and can’t even clean the floor or wash the dishes etc. So how do I approach him to get him to do something other than being on Facebook?

Hi Cookie Vidal –

Okay, first things first:  Nothing here is anything but normal.  16-year-old boys tend to be very forgetful, even if they mean to be responsible; and they usually are a lot less concerned with messes than other people.

If this weren’t the case – if he were, say, 24 – my suggestion to you would be to stop doing his chores.  To leave the dog’s mess out, to leave the floor and dishes (it’s not fair to the dog to not give her water though), and wait till it starts to drive him absolutely nuts.  That method works beautifully – but not necessarily with 16-year-old boys!

So I think you need to take more drastic measures.

The first one is – where is the rest of Continue reading

The Useless Art of Blindness – how to improve relations in our lives

The Useless Art of Blindness – how to improve relations in our lives

I am a dog, with a doggy brain.  It is nowhere near as big or brilliant as yours.  So when you read my thoughts on here, especially those about what people are thinking or feeling, you have to understand that those thoughts were very hard to come by!  It’s not like I just happened to understand these things.  I had to work super hard to figure them out!

 

And yet, almost every day, I see a human, blessed with the most amazing brain in creation, proudly choose to remain ignorant about other people.  To refuse to see what someone else’s feeling or experience is.  And that just makes the hair on my neck stand straight up.  What a spoiled bunch some people are!

 

Where I see this the most, especially lately, is in disagreements.  Now of course, people disagree on things all the time.  That’s part of what keeps life interesting and fun – arguing about who the best basketball player is or what the best movie was, or even who said what to whom when (a game many married couples play for decades!).  But I’m talking about bigger disagreements.

 

For example, as I’m sure you all know, Egypt had a revolution a couple of years ago, and voted in a president who carried the world’s hopes on his shoulders.  Whether it was his fault or because the job was impossible, over time his administration had a lot of problems which angered a lot of people, and eventually the military of the country took over, apparently to prevent another revolution from ruining everything.  Now the Egyptian people have some very understandable reasons to argue – Was he too lenient?  Was he too harsh?  Was he too religious?  Should the country have an even more religious leader?  Was the military right or wrong to do what they did?

 

The problem I’m seeing (at least from overseas) is that this isn’t being discussed in a calm, respectful way; people are fighting and dying in the streets over these debates!  It’s horrible.  And I think that the main reason for all this fighting is that neither side is willing to look at, listen to, and acknowledge the other side’s arguments.  They’re just yelling that each other is wrong, and fighting it out.

 

Well of course, nothing can improve in Egypt until that changes.  You can’t build a unified government when no one’s listening to each other.  So here’s a wish for improvement there.

 

But oh I wish it were only there!  In my country, the United States, our economy has been hurt for years by the people in our government refusing to act together in our best interests.  And just this last week, there’s been lots of fighting about the results of a complicated murder trial.  Now I’m not here to pretend my little brain understands much about the details of economics or law.  But I can tell just by looking that lots of people are yelling and not listening!  Some people are yelling that we need laws to protect people from racism, while others are yelling that individuals have the right to protect themselves.  But when I try to tell them that they’re both right, they just hear barking, so they both yell at me to shut up!  And that makes me angry – and you know why?  Because I’m not being heard!

 

The problem isn’t that they disagree.  The problem is that they’re saying that the other person’s viewpoint has no validity.  And unless you believe that the world has been hit by mass insanity, that is completely impossible!  Of course the people who disagree with you have a valid belief.  Just like the squirrels on my roof have valid reasons to run there, no matter how mad they make me.  Everyone has their reasons, and everyone has their arguments.  And the only hope anyone can have for any resolution is if both sides try to see the other’s point of view.

 

And of course this doesn’t only happen in major political conflicts.  It happens between individuals every day.  Little disagreements blow up in to big fights because neither one will try to see things through the other’s eyes.

 

So why don’t they try to see each other’s viewpoints?  Well, I guess sometimes it’s because they’re too dumb.  But I think most of the time, it’s because they believe that seeing it would make them weaker.  For example, if I’m arguing with Handsome that I should be allowed half of his ice cream, and he says it might give me indigestion, and I say “Well, that’s probably true, but…” that means I will lose the argument, right?

 

Well, actually… Wrong!

 

See, here’s the fuller version.  If I’m stubborn, it goes, Me – “You should give me half your ice cream.”  Him – “No, it’ll give you indigestion.”  Me – “That’s ridiculous!  You’re an idiot!  You should give me that ice cream!”  Him – “No!  Go outside, you’re being obnoxious!”  And the door’s slammed in my face.

While, if I’m not stubborn, it goes differently:  Me – “You should give me half your ice cream.”  Him – “No, it’ll give you indigestion.”  Me – “Well, that’s probably true, but the joy it gives me will be worth it to me.  And I’ll sleep outside tonight in case I get sick at all, so the house won’t get messed up.  And you know it’s not good for you to eat all of that fatty sugary treat either, since you want to look good tomorrow night for that date!”  And guess what – by listening and acknowledging his viewpoint, I win!  And get a full scoop of Black Cherry Swirl… YUMMMM!

 

You see, it’s not just that acknowledging the other person’s point of view helps the discussion move along logically.  It’s also that everyone – dog or human – just hates not being heard!  So now let’s imagine that the argument I described above ended with Handsome saying “I know you really want this, and you’re willing to put up with some indigestion; but there’s also chocolate in this ice cream, and chocolate is really bad for dogs, and could even shorten your life, and I love you far too much to take a chance on losing you.  So while I know it feels bad tonight, I have to say no, because you mean the world to me.”   Well, I might still be hungry, but there’s no way I could be furious or hate him, because I’d feel fully heard.  And cared for!

So imagine if some politician on television said something like “We understand those who want a government run more by the laws of the Koran, but we have to find ways of merging those traditional moral views in with the ideals of our new democracy, in order to succeed in the modern world” – that might sound pretty good.  Or “We understand the need for Egypt to modernize and work as a healthy democracy, but we also don’t want to lose our traditional values and character, and lose our nation’s soul in so doing.”

 

Or, closer to home, “I hear your pain at the racism that has never left the American experience, and we want your help to keep finding new ways to fight it and move on, but we want to make sure we don’t give up on the individual rights everyone needs.”  Or, “I understand the fear people feel when you think you’re not allowed to protect yourselves, but I need you to understand that we people of color feel that way all the time, and need laws to give us protection from being treated as less than others.”  Talk like these might calm some people down.  Way down.  Because everyone would feel heard.  And it wouldn’t weaken their arguments at all.  It would strengthen them.

 

In fact, I think I could argue that the biggest problem in the world today is those who Don’t See.  Who are so insistent on believing that they’re right that they refuse to look at how someone else sees the world.  Whether about religion, politics, race, justice, or even smaller issues.

 

Let’s say a couple goes to a party, and the girl talks with a few flirtatious boys, and her boyfriend gets upset.  They argue – him saying she was disrespecting him, and her saying he’s trying to keep her from having fun with friends.  Well as long as they insist they’re each right, the only place this is going is to BreakUpVille!  But if they tried to look at it through each other’s eyes, maybe they could arrive at a compromise (like where, when boys are flirting with her, she invites him over to join the conversation, perhaps?).

 

It’s a basic rule in life:  Try to see the other person’s point of view, and there’s a possible future.  Not doing so leads to nowhere.  It’s that simple.

Again, I’m not saying you have to agree with anything about that other person’s point of view.  You just have to be willing to see it.  That’s the place to start a real discussion about what to do with the differences.  In fact, it’s the only place a real discussion can start.

About seventy years ago, there was a group that was enormously proud of their ability not to see the points of view of others.  They thought they were so much smarter and better than anyone else, that they had no reason to look or listen to others – because others were less than them, and even evil.  They believed their power was in their sureness of their superiority.  And they took those who weren’t like them, and stuck them in detention camps, and deported them, and murdered millions of them, proud not to look to see how those people saw things.  They were so sure they were better than anyone else that they started a war to take over the world, which killed more people than any other war ever.  And in the end, do you know what they won?  Nothing.  They decimated their own country, lost their own power, died horrible deaths or lived in shame for the rest of their lives, and became a name forever of a pathetic evil and failed group.

These arrogant fools, I’m sure you’ve heard of.   The world has scorned them ever since for their blindness and cruelty.

They were the Not Sees.

 

 

What to do when a sibling gets you in trouble by lying

AudreyKimberly146 asks: Hi, I’m 11 years old and I’m from Indonesia. I love my family, but sometimes they are so annoying. Once I dropped a phone because of my big sis nudging me. She said “sorry” to me, but when Mom asked who dropped the phone, she pointed at me. I explained that my big sis nudged me, but I also told Mom that she has said sorry! Then she yelled at me saying that she never said that and that saying so was an evil thing! And added, “how could you dare blaming your own big sister?” in a mad voice. So, my Mom was angry at me because I’d dropped the phone and blamed my sister! I don’t know what to say to my big sis! Please help me!

Hi AudreyKimberly146 –

 

 

Wow this is a really tough and rotten situation you’re in!  Tough because it’s hard to know what to do, and rotten because it’s totally unfair, and based in what sounds like a lie!

 

If I understand correctly, there’s nothing happening now about this, right?  In other words, you’re not still in trouble or anything?  Because if so, that means you have the advantage of time.  There’s nothing you need to rush into.

 

And if that’s the case, then here’s what I think would be a good idea.  Go up to your Continue reading

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