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1) Parents need to realize the trap that is being
set when their kids asks, "Well, why can't I (fill
in the blank)." Many well intentioned parents then
proceed to give a well reasoned response to the
question and then wonder why the kid blows up and
doesn't accept it at all.
Here's a response I believe a parent will never
get - "Thank you for that explanation Mom and Dad,
I've never thought of it that way before. And now
that you have explained it that way, I not only
can't believe I wanted to do that, I apologize for
asking. Thanks for setting me straight."
If your child ever does say this, call me right
away, something is terribly wrong.
Yet as parents we act as if that is the response
we expect. Most of the time, no explanation will
suffice. Sometimes "because we said so" is the most
useful and appropriate response.
2) When kids yell "You never listen to me and you
just don't understand" and the parents say "Yes we
do!", they are talking about two different things.
They are simply "not on the same page" when it comes
to their definition of listening and understanding.
Many times, when a teenager says you just don't
understand or listen to me, what they are really
saying is you are not agreeing with me and I'm mad
and I'm going to try and get my way!
The solution here is for the parents to make it
clear that while in their family they "will almost
always get a voice, they won't always get a vote."
Taking this position exposes the game the kid
is playing and helps to put the parents in charge.
3) Hearing the words "I hate you!" is one of the
most painful things for parents to experience. It
doesn't help that the words are not spoken softly.
Being able to see what I'm about to say can be very
difficult, but it doesn't make it any less true.
When a kid yells "I hate you!", many times they are
not talking to you but to themselves. Adolescence is
a tremendously hard time for some kids, filled at
times with low self esteem, self contempt and
loathing. Unfortunately, their anger and frustration
is misdirected and comes out at the parents,
resulting in "I hate you" statements.
It's important to point out that this doesn't
make it acceptable to say. It's not. It just exposes
what is really happening here.
4) There is a very common trap here into which many
parents fall. It's the trap of trying to make your
teenager see or do something a certain way, usually
the way you think it should be done. The more you
try to convince them to do it your way, the more
they are committed to doing it their way. Just as in
most traps, the more you aimlessly struggle, the
more trapped you become and the harder it is to get
out.
A very useful technique for getting out of this
trap is offered to us by Jane Nelson and Lynn Lott,
in their book, "Positive Discipline for Teenagers"
(Prima Publishing, $14.95). Nelson and Lott focus
on the need for parents of teens to stop deciding
what they are going to make their kid do and start
deciding what they are going to do. This puts the
parents back in charge by giving them control over
something they can have control over - namely
themselves.
Sometimes this involves deciding what is
acceptable and unacceptable, and then sticking with
it. It's really OK for your teenager not to like it.
That's often part of being a teenager. |