Apter, Terri. You Don't Really Know Me: Why Mothers and Daughters Fight and How Both Can Win.Apter Apter (אַפּטער, Аптер) is a surname that may refer to:
, Tem. YOU don't really know me; why mothers and daughters fight and how both can win. Norton. 280p. notes, bibliog. index, c2004. 0-393-32710-8. $13.95. SA Ask any mother of daughters: the only thing tougher than being an adolescent ad·o·les·cent adj. Of, relating to, or undergoing adolescence. n. A young person who has undergone puberty but who has not reached full maturity; a teenager. girl is being her mother. Terri Apter, a professor of family dynamics and author of Altered Loves: Mothers and Daughters During Adolescence adolescence, time of life from onset of puberty to full adulthood. The exact period of adolescence, which varies from person to person, falls approximately between the ages 12 and 20 and encompasses both physiological and psychological changes. , once again explores the rough terrain of mother-daughter relationships. She does this by including actual mother-daughter conversations along with her theories. She finds patterns in teenage behavior and strategies to deal with them, although she warns against too much theory and asks mothers to remember their own adolescence and relationship with their mothers. Rather than viewing teenage rebellion Teenage rebellion is a historical social phenomenon categorized by mainstream media and popular culture.[1] It is also recognized in psychology as a set of behavioral traits that supersede class, culture or race.It is very natural in every teenager. as an attempt to leave one's mother, Apter sees it as an attempt by daughters to relate to their mothers in a new way by making their mothers see them as the young adults they want to be. Though some of the advice mothers know intuitively (for example, wait until you are both calm before trying to finalize fi·nal·ize tr.v. fi·nal·ized, fi·nal·iz·ing, fi·nal·iz·es To put into final form; complete or conclude: "They have jointly agreed ... a solution), it is sound. Perhaps the most important observation Apter makes is that daughters are not trying to make their mothers crazy or to reject them, but instead are trying hard to define themselves. Understanding that daughters' harsh judgment of their mothers ("I hate the way she breathes") is based on the closeness that makes them aware of every aspect of their mothers' being doesn't make it any easier to accept, but it may make it easier to understand. Apter also looks at the relationship of middle-aged mothers with their own mothers, which usually becomes one of appreciation--a note of hope for any mother of a ] 5-year-old. Although the book is written more as a narrative than a self-help tome, the author's credentials CREDENTIALS, international law. The instruments which authorize and establish a public minister in his character with the state or prince to whom they are addressed. If the state or prince receive the minister, he can be received only in the quality attributed to him in his credentials. and experience lend credibility to her work. Nola Theiss, Sanibel, FL I'd also suggest reading The Lost Daughter by Daralyse Lyons. It's a novel but addresses the same topic. |
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