There could be many reasons.
First, let’s assume you have a son. Then let’s assume that you keep the kitchen stocked with all of his favorite foods, welcome his friends to your house, and drive him hither and thither for his various sports events and social gatherings. Let’s also assume that you buy him most of the clothes he wants and don’t roll your eyes when he goes to school in shorts during the Minnesota winter. Let’s further assume that you’d give him both kidneys, if needed.
In other words, you deserve better.
At a certain point, none of this may matter. Teenagers by biology are focused on the here and now and at most, maybe a day or so ahead. The time may come when he’ll want to leave your loving embrace and live with your ex.
He Doesn’t Mean It
This is one of the more hopeful explanations parents tell themselves in response to their teenager’s sudden desire to change households. If said in an angry outburst or on the heels of a major grounding or restriction, it could very well be true. Teenagers are people, and people say things in anger that they don’t mean. And teenagers have also been known historically to overreact. If their threat to move in with your ex is made under these circumstances, it’s likely that he did not, in fact, mean it.
If it was said in a thoughtful and reasonable way — and more than once — then he probably does mean it and has thought about it for a while. If a parent doesn’t take this seriously, then the parent is likely in denial.
According to grief theory, the questioning stage comes after the denial stage. So here are a few of the reasons why your teenager may want to change households.
A common reason is tension with a parent’s new love interest. You may be enchanted with your new partner, but it’s likely that your teenager isn’t, nor ever will be. Watching a parent canoodle with a new love interest can trigger deep resentment about the divorce and bring to the surface a teenager’s unresolved grief. A new partner who is ham-fisted with authority and expectations can also quickly alienate a teenager. Of course, physical discipline, taunting, and alcoholism or drug abuse by a new partner can send a teenager running to the other parent.
I’ve previously written about the perils new partners can pose to stepchildren. Even without abuse and raging personality conflicts, new partners are a landmine. Tread accordingly.
Less common reasons are conflicts between stepsiblings. Some teenagers hate each other on sight and will resist being thrown together by circumstances they can’t control. Meshing teenagers together in the same household is eerily similar to the roommate lottery at college. It can be the best or it can be the worst, and there are few avenues of escape. One family found themselves with a “Marcia-Greg” scenario where the teenagers flirted with each other. They wisely separated these stepsiblings.
Some teenagers work both sides and will haggle with each parent like they’re at a street market. These teenagers are smart, and they play their game with a cold eye. They’ll negotiate for a new car or special privileges at each household, finally choosing the better opportunity. The ideal environment for them to succeed in this ploy is a landscape of alienation where the parents communicate poorly.
There could also be some very practical reasons driving your teenagers’ wishes. If the parents live in different school districts, and only one district participates in the International Origami Internet Olympiad that your teenager dreams of someday winning, then the parent offering that opportunity may be preferred. Less exotic practical reasons relating to school
districts are later start times in the mornings, an “open lunch” where students can leave the campus and better student parking.
Similarly, some parents are more lenient than others. Teenagers want all the freedom they can grab. It should come as no to surprise to learn that strict schedules, chore lists and mandatory participation in family events may not be to their liking. Some teenagers are merely curious and wish to live with the other parent before going to college or entering the workforce.
There’s a theme here. Teenagers want what they want for a myriad of reasons; they’re like people in that respect. It’s understandable that their wish to change households would be viewed as cataclysmic to the long-term custodial parent. The best approach is to ascertain why the teenager wants to make such a major change and to spend time addressing any legitimate concerns raised. The worst approach is to take the wish personally and alienate the teenager indefinitely.
Ohio is wise in its approach to teenagers and their wishes. The lodestar in custody cases is always the best interests of the child. There’s no automatic age where a minor child in Ohio can dictate with whom s/he lives. In a custody dispute involving an “old child,” an Ohio court must engage in the same analysis as any other custody case.
The wisdom of fighting teenage custody cases is left for another post.
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by Anne Harvey








