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No best answer has yet been selected by couscous. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I can only answer using my own experience, which was that I turned into the most horrible girl on the planet towards my mum when I was fifteen - bar the violence. I wanted to be accepted as an adult and took everything my mum said or did as a personal attack on my wished for independance. With hindsight, she had to keep me in line for good reasons, but at the time she seemed petty, domineering and unsympathetic.
I calmed down when I was about 17, I think, because to my mind she began to treat me more like an adult, in that she didn't want to rule my every waking minute and allowed me to do more of the things I wanted (like go to the pub, I suppose, and not have to be in at 'babyish' times like 10 O'Clock).
Not advice, I know, just what my thoughts were at the time. Maybe that's how your daughter is thinking at the moment. Good luck, and bear with the situation as she will calm down (touch wood).
I'd agree that she's probably jealous of your foster daughter, it's got to be tough going from an only child to having new sister who is already kinda grown up. You could try treating her more like an adult, give her some privilages that only she can do, that they younger girl isn't old enough for and if you can get involved as well and make it about the 2 of you then that's probably going to help too.
Call her bluff, don't be subtle, if she's ranting to you about how unfair life is then just say exactly what you're thinking. Just say you know she's upset about having to share you now but she's got to grow up and realise that life is about sharing and compromise and sometimes she just needs to bite her tongue and deal with it in a more mature manner.