AITA for telling my daughter her focuses should be on school and her future and less about boys?

A mother’s attempt to steer her 15-year-old daughter back to schoolwork clashed with the excitement of her first boyfriend. Caught multitasking—English assignment out but phone glued to her ear—the mom hung up on the boy and confiscated the phone for the day, insisting academics come first.

The daughter felt humiliated in front of her crush, sparking a parent-teen standoff. Was the mom right to enforce priorities, or did she mishandle the moment? Shared online, the story drew mixed reactions: some praised the discipline, others criticized the execution and urged empathy for teenage hormones. This classic clash explores balancing guidance with understanding in the age of first love.

‘AITA for telling my daughter her focuses should be on school and her future and less about boys?’

The daughter’s new relationship consumed her attention, pulling focus from responsibilities. The mom explained:

My (43F) daughter (15F) before winter break got kissed by a boy, and they are dating and she's completely love struck because he's her first boyfriend, and he is all...

and plenty of thoughts would have gone through my head, but my daughter is just boy crazy she calls and texts him 24/7. I asked her if she even started...

Checking in revealed divided attention, leading to intervention. She continued:

20 minutes later when I go to her room to check on her she has out her assignment, but she's on the phone talking to her boyfriend, I told her...

She got mad at me and claimed she was doing both, and her boyfriend through the phone said that she was, but I hung up the phone anyways, and I...

but she was still mad at me because she feels like I embarrassed her I front of her boyfriend, but I told her she shouldn't have been on the phone...

The consequence escalated the conflict, with the mom standing firm. She wrapped up:

I told her that she won't get hee phone back for the rest of the day, and she's even more angry at me now, but it's for her own good,...

ADVERTISEMENT

This mom’s story captures the timeless tension between teenage romance and parental priorities. At 15, first crushes feel all-consuming, rewiring the brain with dopamine hits akin to addiction. Her intervention aimed to reinforce school as the foundation for future success, a valid concern given how distractions can impact grades and opportunities.

Child psychologist Laurence Steinberg notes that teens thrive with clear boundaries but rebel against perceived control (Age of Opportunity). Hanging up and seizing the phone enforced the rule but may have amplified resentment, framing the mom as the villain in a “Romeo and Juliet” narrative. Better approaches include advance warnings (“10 more minutes, then work”) and collaborative rule-setting, fostering agency while maintaining authority.

Society values education over fleeting romances, yet dismissing a teen’s emotions risks eroding trust. The mom’s empathy for her own teenage self shows awareness, but execution matters. Discussing birth control, as some suggested, adds practical protection against hormone-driven risks.

ADVERTISEMENT

She should follow up with a calm talk: validate the excitement (“First love is thrilling!”), reiterate priorities (“School opens doors”), and co-create phone guidelines. Long-term, building open communication ensures she remains a trusted advisor through heartbreaks and beyond.

Ultimately, she’s not wrong for prioritizing education—it’s her method that could use refinement for lasting impact.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Online opinions split between supporting the mom’s discipline and critiquing her approach, blending practicality with teen nostalgia.

ADVERTISEMENT

Many affirmed the mom’s stance, viewing romance as secondary to academics.

[Reddit User] − NTA, ignore the angry teenagers who disagree. She can talk to him after her homework and chores are done, no different than any other leisure activity.

You're not telling her she can't talk to him ever, just that she needs to prioritize school. It's no different than chatting with her girlfriends or playing a video game....

ADVERTISEMENT

Certain_Accident3382 − NTA but. ... don't you remember being 15? Of course her focus is going to be on her Romeo. That's why you guide her back yo her school...

And we all learned after that first magic brush of young love that it's not the Be All and End All of our existence it felt like. But she does...

IncubusIncarnat − NTA, My mom and grandma hammered this into me. "You'll have time to chase them little girls later, but right now your only concern is them books. "

ADVERTISEMENT

maybejustadragon − Think she’s distracted now. Wait till the breakup.

Others saw value in the lesson but faulted the sudden punishment and lack of warning.

Due_Dirt_2841 − NTA. Mostly. Logically speaking, you gave her really solid advice, but she's a teenager and you're her mom. I think some people forget what it was like, and...

ADVERTISEMENT

In her hormonally charged brain, she'll think she's living some Romeo and Juliet romance where she's being kept away from her true love which will only make her heart grow...

In reality, she's losing her s__t over a squeaky little goblin that barely showers, and being kept away just makes him seem even more appealing. My unsolicited advice? Don't minimize...

Sure, it's a teenage crush that will likely amount to little or nothing in her adult years, but the assignment is a short term problem; the relationship you have with...

ADVERTISEMENT

and how comfortable she feels with talking to you and having you be a part of her experiences with stupid goblin boys. .. is a long term one.

Above grades, she needs to believe her experiences outside of her academic achievements are valued by you, whether she admits to it or not, and not doing that will lead...

hellinahandbasket127 − YTA for not laying out the punishment to allow her to make a choice ahead of time. This is my parenting pet peeve. Instead of nagging her to...

ADVERTISEMENT

you should have said, “You can talk for 10 more minutes before starting work, but if you’re still on the phone after that you’ll lose it for the rest of...

It wouldn’t necessarily occur to a teenager that a punishment would be forthcoming when she’s not previously been punished for the same behavior.

So now she thinks it’s unfair to suddenly change the rules, and it is. Don’t get me wrong, the punishment was reasonable. But the way it was implemented was wrong....

ADVERTISEMENT

Ajaxx21627 − I work with teenagers. I think it would be healthy to set some reasonable boundaries around her phone usage and getting her work done. She's going to be...

I think having a convo with her to figure out reasonable guidelines would be a good balance between discipline and teaching your kid agency.

I don't necessarily think there are assholes here, but I don't think you will get very far with teaching your kid healthy boundaries if all you do is take things...

ADVERTISEMENT

Some probed for details and offered nuanced advice.

ginandtonicthanks − Info - I'm assuming back from break is the 2nd? Is your daugter normally on top of her school work? Do you have reason to believe that this...

If you have a kid who is ordinarily responsible and hasn't yet let her being besotted with the boyfriend affect her grades, micromanaging when she works on her English assignment...

ADVERTISEMENT

On the other hand if you've actually observed that she's not getting her work in routinely and it's due to this relationship, it's time for a sit down honest conversation,...

[Reddit User] − NTA But I would look in birth control ASAP. Don’t let her s__ew up her future because of raging hormones. She needs to know that pulling out...

ADVERTISEMENT

mimisburnbook − YTA isn’t she on holiday? Ffs Edit I say this as an adult with a literal PhD

Supporters praised prioritizing education; critics favored proactive boundaries over reactive punishment. The consensus: guide with empathy to preserve trust amid teen drama.

Teens need structure for success, but delivered with understanding to avoid rebellion. Clear rules and open talks build better outcomes than surprise consequences.

ADVERTISEMENT

How would you handle a teen’s first crush derailing homework? Clear rules or collaborative guidelines? Share below!

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *