Please Stop the Rollercoaster! Tips and Tools for Successfully Parenting Your Teens.

5 Easy Communication Tactics That Make a Difference When Parenting Teens

January 4th, 2010 by Sue Blaney

Okay; it’s the start of a new year and you have, no doubt, given some thought to the areas in your life in which you might see some improvement. If you are wanting to see some changes in your relationship with your teen, communication may be the single most important place to focus, for communication is the key to your success. For every conversation, you have a choice in the language you use and in your communications approach. Apply these 5 tactics and you are guaranteed to see some changes for the better:

Be brief. This tip is simple, straightforward and effective. Less is more when it comes to getting your point across with your teenager. When you hear yourself winding up and carrying on, tell yourself to stop. Make the point and end the conversation. Period.

No lectures. Discussions are good; lectures turn your kids off. Effective communication includes give and take. Your most effective approach with a teenager will get him thinking, talking, and contributing. While there are times what you say goes, period [see tip above], avoid getting on your soapbox and lecturing.

Use silence. Pause after you ask a question, then wait for the answer. This tactic, while appearing simple and obvious is one that many parents neglect to use. It is a common mistake to jump in, solve problems for your child and direct too much; parental actions which actually work against you and your teen. Better to exhibit patience and see what she has to say for herself.

Use specific action words rather than abstract terms. Teens, like all kids, are pretty concrete in their thinking, so it helps to use concrete and clear language. Whether you are providing guidance, discussing rules or expectations, or helping your teen sort through an issue with a teacher or friends, in most discussions try to use language that is specific and tangible.

Tune into the feelings even more than the words.As you are interacting with your teenager, consciously try to identify the emotion he is feeling as that may be far more important to respond to than the words. Recognize his underlying emotion and respond to that appropriately. This tactic alone can shift your communication into a realm that is far more satisfying and real for your teen, helping him feel that you are seeing and understanding him at a new, more meaningful level.

These aren’t the only strategies and tactics that can help you improve communication with your teenager… but if you concentrate on these five you can build some new habits that will yield helpful results.

This entry was posted on Monday, January 4th, 2010 at 12:45 pm and is filed under Tips and Tools. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 responses about “5 Easy Communication Tactics That Make a Difference When Parenting Teens”

  1. East Bay Family Therapy said:

    Oh, man do teenagers ever have lecture-induced white-noise generators in their ears. Lectures do not accomplish what parents thing they are accomplishing.

  2. Fern Weis said:

    Great tips, Sue, especially about tuning in to feelings. Everyone wants to be heard. Teens, especially, are in a state of flux, questioning their words, actions, feelings. How comforting it is for them to know that (whether you agree or not) it is okay to express emotions without fear of judgment, criticism, philosophy, or pity. When you build that trust, they will continue to share with you. And when the negative feelings are finally given a voice, they can begin to let them go and start to problem-solve.

    Thanks for talking about this. We all need to be reminded just how powerful acknowledging feelings can be.

    Fern Weis
    Parent Coach

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Please Stop the Rollercoaster! Tips and Tools for Successfully Parenting Your Teens
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