Teenage Parenting – How to connect with your teen?
Category: Teen Story | Dec 13, 2009 |
Parenting adolescents is a huge challenge but with communication, teenage parenting can be made easier for you and your child. One of the hardest things in parenting adolescents is communicating in the right way, and here are some ways that teenage parenting can be made a little less stressful:
Empathy & Reassurance – a successful path to teenage parenting
Your teen may have difficulty identifying what she’s feeling. You probably know when she’s a bit upset, tired or irritated.
While feelings are natural, you might have to help your teen articulate them. Asking: “Are you a bit upset?” may help you both to identify the type and the extent of her feelings, and to find appropriate responses.
Reassure your teen your love and support does not depend on exam grades. If your teenagers don’t get the grades they expected, help them to keep it in perspective – everyone has some setbacks in life, whether it’s failing a driving test or an exam. They can always do resits. Reassure them you’re behind them 100 per cent, and help them to review all the options.
Communication
Teenage parenting requires effective communication skills. There are things you can do to make communication easier:
- Take your cue from your teenager – there’s absolutely no point saying you want to talk, when he’s rushing to get ready for a night out.
- Try to spend time alone with your teenager and go out somewhere if there aren’t any opportunities at home.
- Share information about what’s going on in your life, but only for as long as your teen seems interested.
- Use open questions that don’t just need a yes or no response. For example, “How did the music lesson go?” rather than “Did you have a good day?”
- Don’t use a chat as an opportunity to nag or tell off.
- Never put him down for his views or ideas; he needs your approval.
- Treat your teenager with respect, much as you would another adult.
- It’s better to negotiate a solution than enforce your demands, so don’t say, “I want your room cleaned up tonight,” but “I’m getting really upset at the state of your room. When do you think you can tidy it up?”
- Use all the opportunities you can to communicate – for example, driving somewhere often leads to great conversations.
- Show you’re genuinely interested when your teenager tells you things and stop what you’re doing to listen.
- Don’t overreact or fly off the handle if you don’t like what you hear.
Teenage parenting is fraught with dealing with difficult issues like, such as bad grades or worries about risky behaviour. It’s even more important to find a time when there are no external pressures and you’re feeling calm. Using “I” statements always helps. Say, “I’m worried about the way your school work is slipping,” not “You’re doing really badly in school.” Explain your concerns calmly and listen carefully to his side of the story. It’s fine to stress what you believe in and to be clear if there are any aspects of his behaviour you want him to change.
LET THEM GO Policy:
Teenage parenting is is all about you, the parent. Are you ready to let your teen take over this decision that you have been making for him/her? Take some time to think it through. While it won’t be all at once, there will be a time when it hits you that you aren’t always needed for important decisions, or that you may not agree with the decision your teen made yet the situation worked out fine without you. This can cause some melancholy feelings – and proud feelings too. Ah, the mix emotions of being a parent! You need to prepare yourself for it. When these thoughts and feelings hit, it is important to remember that you are doing a good job and your teenager is lucky to have you in his/her life.
Verbally spell out the conflict and end with a question: “What do you think you could do?” or “What are your options?” Help your teen list a few that he/she may not think of, but don’t do this task for him/her.
Spelling out the pros and cons will help him/her see the big picture of each option, thereby helping him/her choose appropriately. Younger teens often have trouble seeing the big picture, so they may need more help than a 17-year-old. But all teens can use their parents as sounding boards. Be available to listen and help even after your teen has developed good decision-making skills.
Hold your tongue just before you’re ready to say, “I think you should…” If your teen is used to you making the decisions and isn’t getting around to finalizing his thoughts on the options and choosing one, you may want to ask your teen if he/she is worried about ‘being allowed’. Many times at the teen home I would have a teen talk over all of the options and then wait quietly until I told them what they were allowed to choose. An awkward moment or two would follow and then the teen would realize that I wasn’t going to do the choosing and say, “Oh, you want me to choose. I didn’t know I was allowed.” So, this is simply solved by verbally giving permission.
While you shouldn’t act like this is a business meeting, do talk to your teen about what happened, even if the outcome wasn’t what was hoped for. Discuss what he/she might do differently the next time and do not be judgmental. Give your teen positive feedback and tell him/her that you are proud that he/she took on this challenging decision. This will help you and your teen work through important decisions in his/her life. This will add to his/her self-confidence and maturity.
It is difficult to remember that our parents had the same problems parenting adolescents as we do today, but they did. If you manage to communicate with your teenager you are doing really well. Try and think about ways you can talk to your teenager – are there activities you can do together? Think about what you say to them – try and see things through their eyes. Think about how you react – keep calm. Bear these three things in mind and teenage parenting may just get a little less fraught.
Watch the video related to Teen story
this is a story of two teens one in the uk and one in america they decide to visit eahc other so the teen in the uk visits the teen in america they spend a couple of hours together the teen in the uk cant bare it staying in the uk never seeing the americain teen so she dies a cute sad story … love sad story happy death teens america uk
i hurt myself
i was dancing to this song and hit my wrists on the corner of my wall, CRAP!
t.A.T.u!!!!!!!
i know where u can get it. the videos r full too. its by calypsobloom
Where can I find the episode?!?!? I got to watch like the end or something and its never been shown since… Can anyone tell me where I can find it? Good video by the way!
Nice Video! 5/5
)
I really like Teen Titans, though I never know it was starting to close down.. but… I hope it wont! I just cant understand the creators of T-T are shutting it down when it’s an populated show. >: (Go teen titans!
lol just finished watching this episode again and i noticed that the animaters made a big mistakeXD when raven and starfire have there backs against the wall and cyborg reaches through it, they switch raven and starfire back to there bodys for like 5 seconds XD because starfire somehow uses ravens powers and talks in normal voice
good vid btw
Excellence @ its best! I give it 5 stars! XD
Yo This Is Sum Awesomeness Like lol My favorite Show And The Song Is Great too
(D.J) (PnB)^
i luv this song! goes great with this episode.
I have seen adds in newspapers but this does seem like a better way.
What about facebook or myspace where teenagers hang out.
I was reading about how many teen age pregnancy's there are it is horrible and they are to young to be parents.
Too bad this is so long, because most people will not read all of it, but they should because it is hilarious!
Sounds like you are depressed. Talk with a trusted adult and see about getting some help. It sounds like you are very strong and have good judgment and are trying very hard to be okay in a difficult world. So, get with an adult and see about getting some help. I think you'd do great with therapy! Check into some self-help books focused on teenagers, too…bookstores, the library. You might really enjoy a workbook where you can write down your feelings about things, answer questions, do worksheets, etc. There's some teenage ones out there…But, take care of yourself and get some help. I bet your parents are clueless that you are hurting so much. Probably your favorite sister would like to know what you're going through.
[1] DON'T rely on general Internet searches.
Much of the information is incorrect and untested. Examples to avoid: WIKIPEDIA, GOOGLE, YAHOO, YOUTUBE.
[2] DO go to an academic search location – ProQuest, ERIC, JSTOR, PsycInfo to name a few.
[3] DO use peer-reviewed journal articles only – the rest is hearsay.
[4] DO refine your question: divorce when the child is how old? What type of delinquency? How is it measured?
[5] DO remember you can't prove A causes B. You can try to establish a relationship, however.
[6] DON'T misspell your keywords. It's "juvenile" for crying out loud.
[7] DON'T COPY AND PASTE from wikis or other sites. (It's CLEAR you copied and pasted much of what you put in your question – real information doesn't include the word "thru" and doesn't confuse "loose" for "lose.") "Turn It In" software will check your paper and then look at billions of web pages and report back how much you have stolen from other sites. WRITE YOUR OWN PAPERS!
actually it's a little every day
"It is entirely reasonable to conclude that along with a lack of material possessions can cause a youth to slide down the slippery slope into a life of delinquency"
The above sentence needs rewording – …conclude that a lack of…
spelling error "thru"
MY SUGGESTION:
Add some research. See if you can find a report/book that has studied children of divorce, that you can pull quotes from.
Then you can tie together divorce and poverty with information on how divorce pushes many children into lower socioeconomic levels.
A good Essay, but I dont think I agree that divorce parents ''dont really pay attention to the children because they are being too worried with other problems''. The truth is the children sometimes rebel ageinst the parents because they blame both (or sometimes one) parent for the breakup. Therefore this makes it very hard for the parents to communicate with the children who deliberately lock them out of their lives.
Move out of that house! Any adults who would allow a teenager (or any child) to dictate a household are dangerous people.
This boy will grow up to be a horrible bully. He doesn't even have enough character to respect his elder. You're trying to work and this games are more important? These people are allowing this behavior to demean and belittle you–if they had something important to do they certainly would tell that kid to get off line or use the router.
That said, if you can't afford to move and need internet you can buy an internet card so you can surf any where at any time. This will also give you the freedom to get out of that house as often as possible!
Also, you can access the internet without this kid or his parents having access to your service. I guarantee that if you pay for a cable connection this kid will find out that the connection is faster and he'll be on your cable internet service refusing to allow you access.
The movie is Charlie Bartlett.
There are a few trite/odd moments in the movie, but overall, I personally thought it was really cute and quite funny. Really sort of captures a zeitgeist of our generation. Definitely one of the few 'teen comedies' worth seeing this year. I'd call it Ferris Bueller's Day Off for our generation.
I'd definitely suggest it for a good time, but it's not one of my favorites. Look out for Robert Downey Jr. (the principal); he's quite good in it. The main character, Charlie (played by Anton Yelchin) is also really excellent; very endearing. Enjoy.