Tips
for Parents of Teens
by
Marie Hartwell-Walker, Ed.D.
|
When
I decided to hitchhike one day during my high school years, my
grandfather was already waiting on the porch when I got home. Radiating
disapproval and disappointment, he merely said, "Heard you were
needing a ride." My "driver" had called him as soon as he
had let me off. As a girl, I was humiliated and angry (and no, I didn't
try that stunt again). But as a mother of three teens, I have come to
appreciate the extra safety that comes from being in a community where
people watch out for each other’s kids. As a daring teen, I was lucky
to be picked up by a family friend. Although I didn't understand it at
the time, I was also lucky to have adults around me who cared. The
story comes back to me these days as I work to keep my own teenagers
safe. Thirty plus years after my own experiment with “living
dangerously,” my community is much bigger and much more anonymous.
Although I know literally hundreds of people in my town, it's also true
that I don't know thousands more. My friends and I certainly do watch
out for each other's kids, but our kids don't always hang out within our
social circle. They explore. They meet new kids. They experiment with
new behaviors. Needless to say, this is fine if the kids they look up to
are on the honor roll and playing basketball. It's not at all fine if
admission to the group means taking drugs, shoplifting, or violating
family rules. Can
parents continue to guide and influence their children through the teen
years? Of course! But it takes attention and effort. Parenting well in
today’s social climate requires even more patience, vigilance, and
involvement than when your children were toddlers. Little kids generally
have little challenges and problems in a fairly little world defined by
you as parent. Big kids have what are sometimes monumental challenges
and problems in a very large and exceedingly complex universe. Parenting
teens well requires that we understand that our job is not about
controlling them. It's about providing them with "training
wheels" for life – guidelines that give them protection and
experience so that they can develop self-control. Tips for Parenting Teens in Today’s WorldGet
to know the parents of your children's friends:
This is absolutely the most important thing you can do if you want to
have access to your children's world. When your teen begins to
"hang" with a new kid, get the phone number, call the parents,
and introduce yourself. Make a point of giving the child a ride home so
you can walk up to the door and shake the parent’s hand. As soon as
the kids start making plans to get together, touch base with the other
parent to exchange information about rules regarding curfew, acceptable
activities, and supervision. Responses will range from relief that you
are as concerned as they are to resentment that you expect parental
support and involvement. Parents who are like-minded are going to become
part of the support system that keeps your children safe. Parents who
either don't care where their kids are or who think it's absolutely fine
for them to be unsupervised and doing drugs aren't going to respond well
to being asked to be responsible. You may be dismayed but at least you
will know where you stand. Communicate
regularly with those parents:
When teens make plans that involve staying at another teen's house or
getting rides to events with other parents, make sure that you have a
parent to parent communication at some point in the planning process.
Make sure that it is really okay with the other parent that your child
is sleeping over. They may not even know of the plan! Conversely, make
sure that the other parent knows if you are driving their children or
dropping them at an event. Again, check for agreement about the level of
supervision. Establish
the “Three W” rule:
Teens need to tell you where they are going, who they will be
with, and when they will be back. This is not an invasion of
privacy; it’s common courtesy. Adult roommates generally do the same
for each other. You don't need minute details, just the broad strokes of
what is being planned for the evening. If something comes up, your child
can be located. People engaged in “legitimate” activities don't need
to hide their whereabouts. Respect
privacy, but refuse to accept secretive behavior:
It's important to your teen's developing sense of independence to have
some privacy, but he or she must learn the difference between privacy
and secrecy. Your kids do have a right to talk with friends privately,
to keep a diary, and to have uninterrupted time alone. But if your teen
starts being evasive – get busy. Calmly, firmly, steadily insist that
you have a right to know who their friends are and what they are doing
together. Talk to teachers about who your kid's friends are as well and
start to build alliances with their parents. Talk
regularly with your kids about their choice of friends:
Kids often don't realize that they've fallen in with bad company. They
like to think that they see something positive in a kid that everyone
knows is bad news. They may be drawn to the exotic, the different, the
risky. They are teens, after all! And part of the job of adolescence is
learning how to judge character. Keep lines of communication with your
child open so that you can talk about their relationships. Support
your child's positive involvement in a sport, art, or activity: Generally,
kids who come through the teen years unscathed are those who have a
passion about something and who develop a friendship circle around it.
This could be the football team, the dance studio, the skateboarding
club, or a martial art dojo. It really doesn’t matter what it is, but
what does matter is that you get involved. Provide rides. Watch
practices, games, and performances. It doesn't need to take a lot of
time or a lot of money to let your teen and his or her friends know that
you care. Bring the whole team popsicles on a hot day or hot chocolate
on a cold one. Let your child - and his or her group - know that you are
willing to put your time, money, and energy into supporting healthy
activity. Help
your child get a job:
If your child spends too much time at loose ends and doesn’t have a
sport or an activity, at least get him or her working. A job teaches
life skills, eats up idle time, and helps kids feel good about
themselves. Act
swiftly and certainly when something unacceptable happens:
Your son isn't where he said he would be? Go find him. Your daughter's
friend invited a boy into the house when she thought you had gone to
sleep? Get dressed and take everybody home. Your kid comes home drunk?
Put him or her to bed for the rest of the night, but deal with it first
thing in the morning. Be consistently clear, kind, and definite in
response to unacceptable behavior and kids will see that you really
won't tolerate it. Model
adult behavior when you are in conflict with your teen: Whatever you do,
don't yell, threaten, preach, or "lose it" if you don't like a
behavior, a friendship, or how your child interacts with you. You will
render yourself totally ineffective with your teen. Your child will take
you far more seriously if you insist that the two of you focus on
managing the problem instead of yelling at each other. Remember
that your influence depends on your relationship with your child, not
your power. You can't make your child do anything at this stage in life.
It won't help to make threats, to lose your temper, or to try to
"ground" or punish a teen. In fact, these tactics tend to spur
kids on to greater rebellion as they try to assert their independence. My
grandfather was a proper New Englander: quiet, somewhat stern, and
unfailingly kind. I knew that he loved me. Even more importantly, I knew
he trusted me to do the right thing. The reason I didn't hitchhike again
during my teen years was not because I was caught or because I was
punished (I wasn't). I didn't push my rebellion further because I wanted
the respect of my grandfather much more than I needed to demonstrate
that I could do what I pleased. |
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