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

Parenting Exhaustion, Teen Rebellion, and Thoughts from Your Peers

April 26th, 2010 by Sue Blaney

Your notes, calls, comments and conversations have a timely quality about them. Spring arrives with promise, beauty, and the miracles of nature’s annual reawakening… and with rituals and themes that don’t change much in the world of teenagers. Parties, distractions, school pressures, changing relationships…. so many challenges at this time for parents and teens. Let me share a few stories and thoughts that have been ruminating in various conversations over the past week or so…

Parenting teens can be exhausting! Barbara was exhausted last week after deep and long conversations with her son about smoking marijuana. There was planning going on amongst his peer group for civil disobedience and pot smoking on a particular day, and although Barbara was very happy that he gave her the opportunity to engage with him about it, it was trying for her, to say the least. She said “I can see why some parents stick their heads in the sand. It would be a lot easier on me if I were to do that!”

She was thoughtful and careful in her approach with him, making sure to listen and not lecture, and while informing him with facts she was careful to engage with him respectfully. That kind of effort takes time, care, intention and and being informed about the facts herself…. all of which requires energy and more time! Barbara needed a time out when they were done!

Engaged parenting can bring complications, too. Another conversation with a smart and engaged Mom brought forth an interesting situation that may resonate with you. This Mom of college students said she “didn’t give her teens room” to use alcohol or drugs when they were in high school; she said she and her husband were right on top of that issue. With alcoholism in the family the kids were well aware of dangers and issues and didn’t seem to have an interest in experimenting in that area. But one of her daughters had rebellion in her [or should we call it a need for expression?] and it came out in her sexual expression. Their daughter was planning to be sexually active with a boy they considered inappropriate, and these engaged and involved parents resisted and carried on. But, ironically, they had a surprise. When they gave up and relaxed, deciding to step back and allow their daughter to make her own choice and decision, their daughter gave up and broke up with the boyfriend. A sibling explained her change of heart as “it wasn’t naughty anymore.”

Parents might consider how our behavior can drive kids to do the exact things we don’t want them to do! Teens sometimes look for ways to make a statement about their independence and their ability to make decisions for themselves… and if parents play our cards wrong we may inadvertently push them in directions they wouldn’t necessarily go.

There aren’t any hard-and-fast rules here that can help you know how to respond and behave, and these are difficult-to-predict situations. A good start is to be aware to the degree to which your teen is responding to you… which may be driving many of his choices.

Watch PARENTHOOD on NBC. NBC’s Parenthood airs on Tuesday nights from 10pm – 11 edt, and the scenes and interactions between the parents and teens are authentic and worth seeing. Executive producer is Ron Howard, so you know the writing is good. I took note of one particular interaction last week when Sarah, mom of rebellious 15-ish Amber, said to her daughter “I’m through trying to control you. It doesn’t work anyway.” And, like the mom in my last story above, by the end of the show Amber had broken up with the controversial boyfriend.  But, as any self-respecting teen would do, Amber made it very clear to her Mom that this break-up had nothing to do with her. Classic. And a great reminder how important it is for parents to give our teens enough room to save face. It’s simply not important for us to be right, especially if the “right” things happen in the end.

Join me in my weekly discussion about this show. Watch PARENTHOOD on Tuesday nights and come to our Facebook page www.Facebook.com/ParentingTeenagers to dig into some of the interesting questions these parent-teen interactions stir up. It’s good stuff!

Tips from your peers: In celebration of publishing my 100th 2 Minute Tip for Parenting Teens, I asked parents of teens to share your best tip, answering the question “What is the single best piece of advice you can give another parent of a teenager?” Here are the five tips I have chosen as the most universal, helpful and insightful.

  • 1. Christine says: Let them know their feelings, thoughts and words are as important to you as they are to them!
  • 2. From Pat: Pay very close attention to who they choose as their friends. It says volumes about who they are and in what direction they are headed.
  • 3. Stephanie says: You cannot give to your teen what you do not possess yourself. Make sure to nurture your own emotional, spiritual and physical being. Teens are our greatest teachers…
  • 4. From Carolyn: There are two sides to every story!
  • 5. From Janet: Accept your child for the individual that he/she is. Don’t try to change their personality, their true self. Guiding is one thing; changing is something different.
  • Thanks for the great thoughts from all who shared; for more on insights and input from parents like you, click here: Ten Best Parenting Tips from Your Peers.

    From my 100 2 Minute Tips for Parenting Teens, Click for my Top 10 .

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    This entry was posted on Monday, April 26th, 2010 at 10:50 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 “Parenting Exhaustion, Teen Rebellion, and Thoughts from Your Peers”

    1. Ronda Wada said:

      Sue, you hit it on the head with this one! “I wanted to rebel, but my mom wouldn’t let me” In my experience, the tighter we hold on the more suffering we can create on both sides. This is a time that they are compelled to assert their independence and explore their own identities. As parents, if we don’t provide some space for them to do it safely, they will do it some other way. Give them a little elbow room and suddenly they may not need to pull away so hard. Happy Parenting!

    2. Jean-F Rodrigues said:

      Parenting teens can be exhausting

      Hi Sue

      I could not agree more with the title and with what you had to say, I have two children a boy an girl. My son is in his 20’s now but my daughter is now turning 18. Who would have guess that quite a lot of the time teenagers can be more draining than young babies and children. The amount of mental effort required to deal with teenagers, can feel like more effort than running after a toddler because they won’t put a nappy on or because they have grabbed something that you know they’re going to break if you don’t stop them. Can you tell me does being a worn out parent ever stop. I enjoyed reading your blog and look forward to reading some more.
      http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Reluctant-Mr-Mum/109787019063075

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