One of the most charming phone calls I ever received was from a mom who needed “just a little bit of advice.”
Her 12-year-old boy refused to shower. “Can’t he even smell himself?” she asked, genuinely baffled. Why won’t my son shower? It’s one of the most common childhood behavior issues parents bring to me — right up there with screen time battles.
My advice? “Don’t say a word. Let the pack take care of it.”
“What pack?”
“One of his classmates — probably a girl — is going to announce very loudly, ‘Ew, dude, you STINK!’ And then you’ll call me because you can’t get him OUT of the shower.”
I asked her to call me when it happened.
Three weeks later, she called back. Her son had developed what she could only describe as an obsessive interest in hygiene. Couldn’t get him out of the bathroom.
I assured her it would even out — and suggested someone take him shopping for body wash, shampoo, and maybe a body spray. “Take it seriously,” I told her. “The sense of smell is so powerfully wired into the brain that it bypasses the normal sensory processing system entirely and goes straight in. It’s worth getting right.”
She laughed. I laughed.
This is normal adolescent development at work — middle school behavior sorts itself out through peer pressure a lot faster than it does through parental nagging. Sometimes the best parenting move is knowing when to step back and let the pack do the teaching.
I love my job. 😄
Building a stronger you, one day at a time, Dr. Claudia
