Dover.uk.com
If this post contains material that is offensive, inappropriate, illegal, or is a personal attack towards yourself, please report it using the form at the end of this page.

All reported posts will be reviewed by a moderator.
  • The post you are reporting:
     
    "According to a Netmums survey, 13 is the most difficult age. But it's not only parents who find it hard going - it's tough for the teenagers too. Here's how to make it through to being 14, by Miranda Smith, aged 14 and four months.

    1. Don't put up pictures of yourself on Facebook with a bottle of WKD beside you and a comment like: "Got SO drunk last night." No one thinks it's cool - and WKD is only 4% proof.

    2. You're going to feel a whole lot more grumpy when you're 13 than you did at 12. But the thing is it's not just you - every other 13-year-old feels exactly the same. Knowing that helps a bit.

    3. It's tempting, but try not to be on your phone 24/7. It really bugs your parents but, worse, it's boring for your friends.

    4. Thirteen is the age when you're likely to start getting attention from the opposite sex. Don't get carried away by this - there's nothing more moist than a lovesick 13-year-old.

    5. Don't send pictures of yourself in your underwear to ANYONE - because they'll end up being spread around, and you'll regret it.

    6. Your friends will annoy you, make you angry and get on your nerves. But don't insult them on Twitter - 13-year-olds do that all the time. Twitter is a public forum, and if you start tweeting about your issues anyone can get involved even if it's none of their business.

    7. A few months ago, you hardly thought about your body at all. Now it's the only thing on your mind. Of course your body matters: but the thing to think is that no one else notices it as much as you do. So try to chill about it.

    8. At precisely the moment when you decide there's no better way to spend a Saturday than staying in bed til late afternoon, your parents will become obsessed with you doing the chores for them. Rule of thumb: you can only say, "I'll do it later," five times. After that, just do it.

    9. Thirteen-year-olds have massive fights with their friends, all the time. A year on, you won't even remember what those fights were about - but you will remember how unhappy they made you feel.

    10. Plan a really good party for when you reach 14. When the parents say they want to be around you'll think, "OMG no," ... but it's probably going to be best to let them stay. Agree on the conditions, and stick to your side of the bargain provided they stick to theirs.

    As told to Joanna Moorhead"

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2013/jan/17/how-to-survive-being-13

Report Post

 
end link