everything you wanted to know about teenagers but were too frustrated to ask

Parents

Good kids at the bowling lanes

Here is another good news story about young people, another occasion for their mothers and fathers to smile and feel all warm inside.

I don’t put these here to make you feel bad if your kids don’t do this stuff - but to give you hope that not all young people create negativity - now if you could persuade your son or daughter to hag out with good kids!

Rolla resident Dan Phillips writes that he was pleasantly surprised when he took his two daughters, 7 and 5 along with a friend, bowling last Monday, the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

Writes Phillips, “When we started our second game, a group of teenagers began bowling next to us. The group was bowling next Imageto us for almost an hour and it occurred to me that I did not hear a single swear word or sexual innuendo. They were not rude or loud. They were just great young people.

“In a world filled with the negative thoughts and notions about teenagers, I just wanted to say thanks to Adam, Cody, Cat, Nat and Burt (names from their scoring screen) for their wholesome behavior.

“I wish more young people followed their example.”

Pick your battles

Many parents take time to realise that some things are not worth fighting over and Kelly details this in a great, humorous way:

Butterfly (16) flitted around all day, preparing for a weekend retreat up north with her church youth group. A nice thing about parenting teens is that they can pack for themselves. A difficult thing about parenting teens is that they pack for themselves. Items that are entirely inappropriate. But my gosh, I need to pick my battles, and I’d rather save up my “no’s” for issues like beer bongs.

Jim Graham said it like this: Major on the Majors. Of course you have to decide what is a major to your family but if you fought every battle that became available you would be very tired and battle worn.

Parenting Teen Girls

Alison, over at Life Seminars made a very informative post a few days ago. She said:

Parenting Teen Girls

One thing I hear from parents over and over again is concern for their young girls and their body image. It isn’t unusual for a slim nine-year-old girl to express concern over her weight. What is Imagegoing on? We know the media plays a huge role in all of this and I too have heard the same concerns voiced from my very petite daughter as well. I have concluded that there are several important areas to focus on

She then went on to list several practical tips on what not to do and what you can do to help your daughter as she grows.

Surely as a society we have to take some responsibility when nine year olds are expressing these concerns - well any age actually but at nine?

Are you meaner than this?

Supernanny has quoted the following:

Jane Hambleton has dubbed herself the “meanest mom on the planet.”

After finding alcohol in her son’s car, she decided to sell the car and share her 19-year-old’s misdeed with everyone — by placing Imagean ad in the local newspaper.

The ad reads: “OLDS 1999 Intrigue. Totally uncool parents who obviously don’t love teenage son, selling his car. Only driven for three weeks before snoopy mom who needs to get a life found booze under front seat. $3,700/offer. Call meanest mom on the planet.”

I love the idea of logical consequences [and I am assuming that his parents bought him the car in the first place] but it does come across as a little harsh. Having said that who knows what has gone on before about their son’s drinking habits; or the rules by which he was given the car etc.

Do you think she’s mean?

Mount Shasta Training Program

There is an interesting training program offered in Mount Shasta [wherever that is!]

Parenting teens workshop — “Parenting Teens, the Truth About Their Language,” 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., Mount Shasta Community Resource Center Annex, 107 E. Alma Street, Mount Shasta. Learn teen terms and gather tools to help you communicate better with your teen. Dinner and childcare provided. Pre-registration required by calling 926-1400. No charge.

I guess it would be best if parents could take their cell phones with them because that seems to be the best way to communicate with young people these days. Maybe they will have a module in the training that encourages parents to talk in paragraphs of 160 characters or less?

Free food too! See you there?

Two nice young men

Karen felt so strongly, so positive that she wrote this letter to her local newspaper:

On New Year’s Day, I was shoveling the six-plus inches from my neighbor’s driveway since they were on vacation.

Two young men, Randy Scott and Dan Kotscharjan from Randy’s Lawn Care in Cary, were driving by and stopped to see if I needed help.Image

I told them I couldn’t pay them, and they said that it didn’t matter. These two nice, young men had been plowing most of the night, yet they were willing to stop and help me finish shoveling the driveway.

With their help, the driveway was cleaned for my neighbor’s return home.

It goes to show that there are young people who are caring and helpful, and I will be forever grateful for the help from these two nice, young men.

I guess Mrs Scott and Mrs Kotscharjan [Randy and Dan's mothers] will feel all warm and fuzzy to read that; and - as a side issue - it won’t do the business any harm either.

I wanted to post it just to say - there is good news out there; and mothers - keep up the good work, you do make a difference.

What is family to you?

Micky expresses it like this:

I think about my family…my “family”…I think I have the most messed up family in the entire world. It was not fun to come home to the mess that was my mom…it was not fun at all…it was not fun to come home to what my brother has become, an angry teenager who hates the world because of the life he has been given…it was not fun to come home to a father who constantly reminds me how much college is costing me…
Christmas wasn’t half bad…for one whole day we could pretend like we were a happy family, I wish it could always be like that

Sad to say, Micky, that there are many more messed up families out there - but in saying that I don’t want to minimise what you live with. Angry teenagers are on the increase I reckon.

And yeah - if we could pretend it was Christmas every day - now wouldn’t that be good!

Emotional Roller Coaster revisited

At the same time as adolescents are tied into a changing of body their emotions are often at the mercy of hormonal change. They may feel from time to time that nobody is in control! Here there is a need for personal space and sensitive space. Remember they are not yet adults and you will have to treat each moment as it comes, sometimes they will want you to give lots of hugs, other times they will brush you away. Do try to be understanding.

With the best of your intentions your teenager may still feel no one understands. Someone has said that every adolescent believes they are the first adolescent in history! This can lead to a sense they are meeting the challenge alone, and as their fears are often poorly articulated, they can be misunderstood by adults as a rejection of their love. This is not the case but they need to talk on their own terms and at their own choice of time, which rarely coincides with a time convenient to us.

Dr Ross Campbell in his book, ‘How to Really Love Your Teenager’ gives some helpful advice on how to recognise those times when your adolescent wants to talk. Everyone will be able to identify those times if they look for the clues. He writes about the teenager who really wants to talk on a subject which they find threatening, so instead of getting straight down to the point, will ask a question quite out of character. The alert person will pick this up.

For example, if they never ask about how your day went but suddenly do, this is a clue that a deeper conversation is being looked for. Campbell puts it like this, ‘We must be alert for such unsolicited and sometimes puzzling gestures, usually a hesitant teenager’s way of asking for time and focused attention. He is ‘feeling us out,’ testing us to see what kind of mood and frame of mind we’re in - to see if it is safe to approach us on an issue about which he feels uncomfortable.’ He says that for his own children he got used to the words, ‘Oh by the way’ being the code to pay particular attention.

As has already been indicated, adolescents have not achieved a settled identity and part of the emotional change they go through is establishing this identity. The question, ‘Who am I?’ can lead to crises. Pressure on all sides to be this or that creates confusion, inconsistency, discouragement, and even anger. As adults you must recognise your own fallibility and if young people have not already grasped this truth, they certainly will during the adolescent years. This realisation may cause anxiety as they come to terms emotionally with this truth.

Communication Killers

Continuing our mini-theme, here are some things guaranteed to kill a conversation at 20 paces.Image

  • Classic putdowns and the inappropriate use of humour
  • Increasing the volume - don’t scream!
  • Verbal overkill - otherwise known as going on and on
  • Shifting the topic
  • Suggesting they do things that we don’t do ourselves
  • Body language - a shrug of the shoulders communicates a lot
  • Finishing their sentences for them [so frustrating!]
  • Simply not listening

Communication is a two way process, so sitting their silently doesn’t work too well either.

Listening Tips

When they do begin to open up you will need to become an active listener - here are some thought provokers:Image

  • Don’t listen with just your ears - use your eyes and your emotions too
  • Don’t be a mind reader and fill in the gaps that they leave - ask if you want to know more.
  • Try not to be judgmental - listen with an open mind
  • Watch for their facial expressions and look out for when they are fidgeting
  • Silence is a great tool - use it wisely
  • Be careful with your interruptions especially if they are getting deep and meaningful
  • Tone of voice is definitely worth tuning in to
  • Practice reflecting back to them in summary form what you have heard.
  • Avoid cliché comments - one example that many people don’t like is ‘How did that make you feel?’
  • Find the time to listen - don’t let them feel pressured.

Feel free to add to the list - press the comment button below.