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Parenting Your Teenager:
FAQ's from Parents of
Teenagers
Q: My husband and I are at a loss as
to what to do with our two teenagers. They have been great kids and
all of a sudden it seems like we are in teenage hell! We keep
fighting to see the kids we once knew, and they keep fighting to get
their own way. We have been considering family counseling, and
really would like to know what goes on in counseling. Can you give
us some help with our kids and what to expect in counseling?
Sure can. Here’s how it usually goes. I
get a call from a worried mom or dad, who are at a loss as to what
to do with their teenager(s). We talk for a few minutes and we set
an appointment.
A few days later, (in desperate
situations, sometimes the same day) Mom and Dad come in with
their teenager. After we exchange a few pleasantries, we get down to
work. The parent’s view is something like this - they see the kid
they raised from an infant changing right before their eyes, usually
getting more and more out of control.
Their concerns can run through a
whole range of problems. From slipping grades, bad attitudes and
little or no communication all the way to depression, running away
or drugs.
The teens view usually goes something
like this - “if mom and dad would just get off my back and trust me,
everything would be OK. I’m not a little kid anymore!”
Sound familiar? If it does, don’t
worry, you are part of a very big club, whose only membership
requirement is to have a family with kids.
If we boil all the many concerns of
this family down into a few sentences, it would look something like
this:
The parent’s bottom line is “I want my
kid back.”
The teen’s bottom line is “I want to be
more and more in charge of myself.”
While those two statements may sound
like “irreconcilable differences”, they don’t necessarily have to
be. They are both valid needs.
Let’s take a look at each side of
this dilemma, and then how to bring them together.
“I Want My Kid Back”
Many parents feel as if overnight, a
stranger is living in their house. They want to continue to help
their kids, but their kids don’t want any help. The heartfelt cry of
parents has been expressed by singer-songwriters Harry and Sandy
Chapin in their song “Tangled Up Puppet” -
“I have watched you take shape from a
jumble of parts,
To find the grace and form of a fine
work of art
Hey you, my brand new woman (man),
Newly come into your own
Don’t you know that you don’t need to
grow up all alone?”
How to Get Your Kid Back
Realize that the toddler/child you once
knew is gone. You have a budding young adult on your hands. Cherish
the memories.
Realize that breaking away from you at
some level is their job at this point. At the same time, they
usually return once they have gone through this passage. In whatever
way possible, maintain the relationship in a way that keeps it
intact for when need you. Sometimes you have to catch them off
guard. Again, in the words of Harry and Sandy Chapin, “Tonight while
we played tag for five minutes in the yard, just for a moment, I
caught you off guard.”
Remember that it’s their job to act like
they don’t need you. But they desperately do need you. Hang in there
with them.
Pick your battles. You don’t have to
fight to win over each and every issue.
“I Want to Be In Charge of Myself!”
This is not only the heartfelt cry of
teenagers, it’s their job as well. Parenting is one of those rare
jobs where the goal is to work yourself out of a job. Unless you
want your child living with you at 30. But that’s a whole other
column.
How to Be “In Charge of Your Self”
Make sure your behavior matches your
words.
Do what you say you are going to do.
From my seminar “The Care and Feeding of
Parents”: “Here’s how to tell when you are growing up - when you can
do something even though your parents suggested it.”
Pick your battles. Every issue is not a
battle for independence. This one is important. If you constantly
have to fight to do the opposite of what your parents say no matter
what, you are just as controlled as if you obeyed their every
command.
Do this things, and you’ll get to
be more and more in charge of your self. Don’t do these things, and
you have just sent your parents an engraved invitation to bug you as
much as they want.
A final word for both sides:
remember that the relationship is always more important than being
right! |