She no longer viewed you as a person made b’tzelem Elokim, let alone a parent

I would start by thinking about what you want to teach your daughter. There are plenty of possibilities here! Her behavior shows a deficit in the skills of emotional regulation, kibbud av v’eim, and interpersonal communication.
However, it also reveals the exclusive focus on oneself and one’s feelings characteristic of many teenagers. Because her evening wasn’t going to unfold the way she wanted it to, she felt entitled to heap abuse upon you, her mother. She no longer viewed you as a person made b’tzelem Elokim, let alone a parent. She showed no regard for your poor health and no understanding of your need for recuperation and self-care.
Her attitude reminds me of a story about a woman I met, whose 65-year-old husband had a stroke a few years back. He recovered and continued to work. However, the woman was very concerned about his health, as he remained easily fatigued and prone to illness since the health crisis. She urged him to take care of himself by retiring as soon as possible. When the couple’s children heard of their mother’s wish, they were horrified. They wanted their father to continue to provide financial support for them for many more years and knew that he would have to work in order to do so. In fact, they were hoping he would increase his hours to better meet their needs! These “children” were in their thirties and forties.
One might wonder how they reached their adult years with such little care, love, and concern for their parents. I’d suggest they didn’t suddenly develop their selfish perspective at midlife, but rather had nursed it over the previous decades. It’s possible that their parents, so eager to show their love and so terrified of saying no, taught these children to care only about themselves.
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