During adolescence, teens work on becoming more independent. Your
teen must cast aside the dependent parent-child relationship.
Before he can develop an adult relationship with his parents, a
teen must first distance himself from the way he related to his
parents in the past. This usually means there will be a certain
amount of normal rebellion, defiance, discontent, and
restlessness. Emotions usually run high. Mood swings are common.
This rebellion continues for about 2 years, but it is not uncommon
for it to last for 4 to 6 years.
The following guidelines may help you and your teenager through
this difficult time.
- Treat your teenager as an adult friend.
By the time your child is 12 years old, start working on
developing the kind of relationship you would like to have
with your child when she is an adult. Treat your child the way
you would like her to treat you when she is an adult. Your
goal is mutual respect, support, and the ability to have fun
together. Strive for relaxed, casual conversations during
bicycling, hiking, shopping, playing catch, driving, cooking,
mealtime, working, and other times together. Use praise and
trust to help build her self-esteem. Recognize your child's
feelings by listening and making nonjudgmental comments.
Remember that listening doesn't mean you have to solve your
teen's problems.
- Avoid criticism about "no-win" topics.
Most negative parent-teen relationships start because the
parents criticize their teenager too much. Dressing, talking,
and acting differently than adults helps your teen feel
independent from you. Your teen will probably like to do the
things his friends do. This is an important step in your teens
development. Try not to attack your teenager's clothing,
hairstyle, makeup, music, dance steps, friends, recreational
interests, room decorations, use of free time, use of money,
speech, posture, and philosophy. This doesn't mean withholding
your personal views about these subjects. But allowing your
teen to rebel in these harmless areas often prevents testing
in major areas, such as drugs, ditching school, or stealing.
Step in and try to make a change only if your teenager's
behavior is harmful, illegal, or infringes on your rights (see
the sections on house rules).
Another common error is to criticize your teen's mood or
attitude. A negative or lazy attitude can only be changed
through good example and praise. The more you dwell on
nontraditional (even strange) behaviors, the longer they will
last.
- Let society's rules and consequences teach responsibility
outside the home.
Your teenager must learn from trial and error. As she
experiments, she will learn to take responsibility for her
decisions and actions. Speak up only if your teen is going to
do something dangerous or illegal. Otherwise, you must rely on
the teen's own self-discipline, pressure from her friends to
behave responsibly, and the lessons learned from the
consequences of her actions.
City curfew laws will help control late hours. A school's
requirement for being on time will help your teen want to get
enough sleep at night. School grades will hold your teenager
accountable for homework and other aspects of school. If your
teen has bad work habits, she will lose her job. If your
teenager makes a poor choice of friends, she may find her
confidences broken or that she gets into trouble. If she
doesn't practice hard for a sport, she will be pressured by
the team and coach to do better. If she misspends her
allowance or earnings, she will run out of money before the
end of the month.
If by chance your teenager asks you for advice about these
problem areas, try to describe the pros and cons in a brief,
impartial way. Ask some questions to help her think about the
main risks. Then conclude your remarks with a comment such as,
"Do what you think is best." Teens need plenty of opportunity
to learn from their own mistakes before they leave home and
have to solve problems without an ever-present support system.
- Clarify the house rules and consequences.
You have the right and the responsibility to make rules
regarding your house and other possessions. A teen's choices
can be tolerated within his own room but they need not be
imposed on the rest of the house. You can forbid loud music
that interferes with other people's activities, or incoming
telephone calls after 10:00 PM. While you should make your
teen's friends feel welcome in your home, clarify the ground
rules about parties or where snacks can be eaten. Your teen
can be placed in charge of cleaning his room, washing his
clothes, and ironing his clothes. You can insist upon clean
clothes and enough showers to prevent or overcome body odor.
You must decide whether you will loan him your car, bicycle,
camera, radio, TV, clothes, and so forth.
Reasonable consequences for breaking house rules include loss
of telephone, TV, stereo, and car privileges. (Time-out is
rarely useful in this age group, and spanking can cause to a
serious breakdown in your relationship.) If your teenager
breaks something, he should repair it or pay for its repair or
replacement. If he makes a mess, he should clean it up. If
your teen is doing poorly in school, you can restrict TV time.
You can also put a limit on telephone privileges and
weeknights out. If your teen stays out too late or doesn't
call you when he's delayed, you can ground him for a day or a
weekend. In general, grounding for more than a few days is
looked upon as unfair and is hard to enforce.
- Use family meetings for negotiating house rules.
Some families find it helpful to have a brief meeting after
dinner once a week. At this time your teenager can ask for
changes in the house rules or bring up family issues that are
causing problems. You can also bring up issues (such as your
teen's demand to drive her to too many places and your need
for her help in arranging carpools). The family often
functions better if the decision-making is democratic. The
objective of negotiation should be that everyone wins. The
atmosphere can be one of: "Nobody is at fault, but we have a
problem. How can we solve it?"
- Give space to a teenager who is in a bad mood.
Generally when your teenager is in a bad mood, he won't want
to talk about it with you. If teenagers want to discuss a
problem with anybody, it is usually with a close friend. In
general, it is best to give your teen lots of space and
privacy. This is a poor time to talk to your teen about
anything, pleasant or otherwise.
- Use "I" messages for rudeness.
Some talking back is normal. We want our teenagers to express
their anger through talking and to challenge our opinions in a
logical way. We need to listen. Expect your teenager to
present his case passionately, even unreasonably. Let the
small stuff go--it's only words. But don't accept disrespectful
remarks such as calling you a "jerk." Unlike a negative
attitude, these mean remarks should not be ignored. You can
respond with a comment like, "It really hurts me when you put
me down or don't answer my question." Make your statement
without anger if possible. If your teen continues to make
angry, unpleasant remarks, leave the room. Don't get into a
shouting match with your teenager because this is not a type
of behavior that is acceptable in outside relationships.
What you are trying to teach is that everyone has the right to
disagree and even to express anger, but that screaming and
rude conversation are not allowed in your house. You can
prevent some rude behavior by being a role model of
politeness, constructive disagreement, and the willingness to
apologize.