Lecturing and nagging can ruin your parent-child relationship while virtually never managing to create positive behavioral change

You have a couple of choices here. The first one is the easiest. Let her stay up till one a.m. You might choose this one if, after carefully collecting evidence, you find that her late nights aren’t causing her any harm. If she’s “super social and studious,” she may be thriving despite her few hours of sleep. Is she maintaining her grades? Is she able to wake up by herself in the morning and be at school on time every day? How is her behavior in the home? Does she have enough energy left to keep her room clean, be pleasant to her parents and siblings, help out when asked to? How is her health? Is her immune system up and running or is it compromised now, knocking her out with chronic headaches, strep throats, or colds?
If your evidence shows that she is crabby, dysfunctional, or unhealthy, unfortunately you won’t be able to choose this first option. But if she’s doing well in life, then letting her stay up has several advantages. One of the most important is that it reduces friction between you and her. Her future well-being will be nurtured far more by experiencing a warm, close mother-daughter relationship in her teen years than by keeping to a more conservative bedtime.
A second benefit of letting her determine her own bedtime is that adolescence is a time when kids benefit from being able to make decisions and evaluate outcomes. She can acquire experience in making mistakes now, long before she’s married when the cost of making errors increases significantly.
However, if your daughter is showing signs of sleep deprivation in any of the ways discussed above, you will have to step in. You say she’s a “young teenager,” and by this I am assuming that she is under 16 years old. This is important to clarify because kids around 17 cannot be parented the way 13- and 14-yearolds can be. So, assuming she’s in the younger category, you can “lay down the law” regarding bedtime.
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