Posts Tagged motivate
Raising a Well Behaved Fun Loving Teenager – Teenage Parenting 101
Posted by Norbert Georget in About Teenagers, Communication, Disciplining, Main Blog Posts, Parenting Tips on August 8th, 2010
Raising your teen doesn’t have to be an ordeal (for either of you ). You CAN learn how to enjoy a calm, peaceful, and fulfilling relationship with your teen. The ultimate method in Positive Parenting….
If you wish you knew the secrets of raising an obedient, happy, and polite teen…
…if you wish you could put an end to the arguments, anguish, and stress your teenager is causing in your home…
…or if you just wish you could get them to clean their room and fill the car with gas every now and then…
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click Here
Then you’re going to want to lock the door, take the phone off the hook, and read this page carefully.
Here’s the story….
Waltons… Or Simpsons?
Interesting question. Whether your family is like the Waltons, the Simpsons or the Bundys…
Whether you’re living in the thirteen hundreds, the eighteen hundreds or the twenty-first century, it’s never easy raising a family.
Each and every one of us though will have something in common with the mythical characters and our counterparts of yesteryear.
To go from baby to toddler to mature adult, there’s one stage all kids will definitely need to go through regardless of anything else, and that’s adolescence.
Or in other words, the teenage years. Dun-da-DAH! This is when you’re supposed to hear the music from the movie ‘Psycho‘ echoing in your head.
Okay, maybe it’s not that bad.
But ask yourself this question: is your family closer to the Waltons…or to the Simpsons?
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click Here
Which Teen Is Yours?
The anguished teenager, the rebellious teenager, the bookworm, the go getter, the jock, the cheerleader, the nerd, the mixed up one who’s not popular but has the potential…the list of teenage stereotypes is practically endless, and if you look hard enough you’ll always find a teenager that will suit one of these stereotypes.
If you look harder still though, you’ll see that some facet of their personalities will fit each and every one of these stereotypes.
So what do you do then?
Raising a teen is hard enough, if you don’t know what mold they fit into how can you proceed any further?
That’s easy really.
And answering that question is what led Vanessa Thomas to start doing the research and coming up with the answers to her own kids problems.
In the process she learned a lot of things that can be helpful to any parent struggling with a difficult (or soon-to-be- difficult teen).
She wrote all about her triumphs and strategies to parenting teenagers to becoming well behaved fun loving teenagers in her new book called….
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here for more info.
It comes in an ebook and audio book form.
In her book, Teenage Parenting 101, you’ll learn:
===> You don’t have to spend alot of money and buy your kids “Stuff” to have them turn out right.
===> You won’t need to try out any weirdo, new-age, wacko parenting stuff.
===> How you can avoid the big problems of drugs and sex.
===> It can be easier than you ever suspected to raise great kids.
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here
She put all this information into a fast-reading, easy-to-follow ebook (electronic book) you can download in mere seconds from now.
Once you get a copy of this book and follow its instructions…
Your Friends Will Be Astounded
By The Change In Your Teen
Maybe your friends are accustomed to nodding wisely, clucking about how tough you have it with your teen.
They might give you lip service about how sorry they are that you’re having problems with your children.
You and I both know that in their secret heart, they are thinking, “That could never happen to my child.”
Imagine how amazed they’re going to be when your kid does a complete turn-around, thanks to what you learn in Vanessa Thomas’s book.
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here
It’s about 100 pages of nothing but the solid, useful truth.
And when I say useful, I mean it!
… Just Some Of What You’ll Learn
In Teenage Parenting 101
Here’s just a little taste of what’s inside this book (which you can be reading in less than 2 minutes from now if you want)…
===> The teenage “identity crisis” - why it happens, and what you can do about it. (page 18)
===> Rebels without a clue… it’s wired into teens to rebel. But they often don’t even know why. How you can cope. (p. 19)
===> Communicating across the chasm. Simple ways you can bridge the age gap, communicate with your teen, and help them to be independent without being delinquent. (page 26)
===> The guaranteed way to keep track of your teen. Want to know who they’re with and what they’re doing? Do this, and you will always know. (page 35)
===> Facing peer pressure. Despite what your teens say, they need your help with peer pressure. You can help — if you just know how (hint: it has nothing to do with “just say no”). (page 41)
There are 3 other bonus gift items for you, plus she also has an 8 Week Unconditional Guarantee. So you can’t lose…
So if you want peace of mind in your home with your teens, along with you standing proud knowing that you did a good job with raising and developing such great fun loving teenagers, you got to check this out right now….
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here
All my best,
Norbert Georget
PS. I made arrangement for you to get it at a discounted price, but only until this Saturday at midnight. So you better check it out today…
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click Here
Improving Parent – Teen Relationships In Your Family
Posted by Norbert Georget in Communication, Main Blog Posts, Parenting Tips on June 17th, 2010
Parent – teen relationships are difficult to manage at times. Parents often joke about dreading the teen years, but the joking is a sign of the real discomfort that lurks behind every thirteenth birthday and the teen relationships parents are unsure how to develop. It can be a difficult time for parents and teens, learning how to relate to each other with the new expectations and pressures that occur on both sides of the table. Parent – teen relationships are often fraught with heated emotions. Parents have difficulty handing control over to teens and teens have difficulty believing that they still need guidance and guidelines. Having teenagers definitely makes life a little more challenging.
Teenagers today have access to all kinds of knowledge – and while that knowledge gives parent – teen relationships an edge because it’s easier to see that others are experiencing the same issues and provides reassurance that both sides will survive, it also gives teens access to information that parents used to control. How, as a parent, do you manage your relationship with your teen given the access he or she has to information?
The best approach is transparency. The more direct and honest parents are with their teens, the more successful parent – teen relationships can be. Your teens are going to know about things that you did not know when you were their age. Instead of doling out information as your parents may have done with you, your role will be more of a mediator of information: it will be up to you to make sure that what information your teen is getting is followed by discussions with you that help them fit what they are seeing and learning into the larger scope of the morals and lessons you are trying to teach them.
A good example of how this can work to enhance parent – teen relationships is with movies and music. Even if you don’t allow anything but G-rated movies and music into your home, with iPods and cell phones, there is no doubt your teen will see and hear what is out there. Rather than rule with an iron fist and attempt to forbid your teen from taking part in these activities, do two things:
- Get to know the music and movies that teens are interested in so that you can make a fair judgment about the content, and
- Understand that you cannot control everything your teen sees and hears, but you can maintain open communication and help them understand that what they see and hear does not always reflect your beliefs, values, traditions, ideals, or expectations
Having frank discussions with your teens about the risks of sex, the lasting affects of drugs, the addictiveness of cigarettes and alcohol, and about treating people with respect will earn your teen’s attention and respect and improve parent – teen relationships. In study after study and survey after survey, teens are clear about what they expect from parent – teen relationships: they want the adults in their life to be straight with them, to treat them like the almost-grownup people that they are, and recognize their individuality. The more you do that, the better your relationship with your teen will be.
Norbert Georget is an accomplished professional speaker, teen motivator, parenting expert and author of the book, No-Nonsense Parenting For Today’s Teenager – How To Feel Like A Good Parent Even When Your Teenager Hates You. You may get a FREE REPORT called No-Nonsense Parenting for the Disrespectful Teenager. All the answers you’ll need to deal with your disrespectful teenager.
Turning Your Child Into a Mature Teenager
Posted by Norbert Georget in About Teenagers, Communication, Main Blog Posts, Parenting Tips on April 2nd, 2010
Somewhere around the time your child turns 8, 9, 10, or 11, he or she will discover that you are not the superhuman you always seemed to be. You will fall off the pedestal and become a human being with flaws, just like everyone else in the world. This is a devastating but necessary moment in every child’s life…it’s when they take their first steps toward recognizing themselves as separate individuals from you. It’s the beginning of the growing up process, one which will hopefully result in your child becoming a mature teen and a responsible, decent adult.
The struggle, of course, is getting from the point where they recognize you are simply human to the point where they are a mature teen without both of you tearing your hair out and disowning each other. In some families, this seems to happen naturally and easily, but it takes a lot more work that it might seem to from the outside to raise a responsible, mature teen, but there are some things you can do to help both of you get there in one piece.
Mutual Respect
Lots of parents complain that their teens are disrespectful, but earning a teen’s respect starts with you showing them how to be respectful. That means being respectful of your teen. It’s not easy; even a mature teen can be mouthy and critical and difficult to handle, but if you operate from a point of respect for your teen as an individual who is allowed to have different opinions and beliefs from yours, you will be helping to bring out the mature teen in your child. When you show respect, it’s easier to expect respect too.
Open, Honest Communication
Hiding behind your fears and insecurities will not help you raise a mature teen. No, it’s not easy to talk about sex, love, dating, life, choices, lying, homework, friends, driving, or anything else with the teen who is at an age where he or she feels invincible and omnipotent, but the more open and truthful you are with your teens the easier it will be for your teen to talk to you about the tough stuff. If they don’t talk to you about the challenges they face in life, you won’t have the opportunity to help guide them through each new challenge and help them learn how to handle it on their own.
Letting Go
It’s easy to just keep thinking you have to hold your teen’s hand every step of the way, but in truth, if you want to raise a mature teen, you have to let go and let your teen do some things independently, even if you can see that the end result will be something you would have wanted them to avoid. Letting go gradually can help make the process easier, but letting your teen have the ability to make choices and decisions while you are still there to help them deal with the consequences is an important part of raising a mature teen.
Keeping the Faith
There are days when you will wonder what that strange teenage being did with your son or daughter. Raising teens is difficult, and it does often feel like the child you gave birth to has been replaced by something much more terrifying. You and your teen will survive.
Norbert Georget is an accomplished professional speaker, teen motivator, parenting expert and author of the book, No-Nonsense Parenting For Today’s Teenager – How To Feel Like A Good Parent Even When Your Teenager Hates You. You may get a FREE REPORT called No-Nonsense Parenting for the Disrespectful Teenager. All the answers you’ll need to deal with your disrespectful teenager.
Reduce the Pressure From Teen Sports
Posted by Norbert Georget in About Teenagers, Communication, Main Blog Posts, Parenting Tips on January 4th, 2010
The age at which we expect teens to specialize and focus on their future continues to get younger and younger, not just academically but athletically as well. The pressure of teen sports on athletes to perform well, earn scholarships, and “go pro” is extraordinary. Sometimes, the focus of an athletic program shifts toward an attitude of ‘win at any cost’ to the detriment of the teen athletes.
How do you know when the pressure of teen sports has gone too far? Is your teen tired, cranky, depressed, or easily frustrated? Are your teen’s grades beginning to slide? Are you getting messages from teachers that your teen is not turning in homework on time or coming to class prepared?
While these can all be indications of other issues as well, if your teen is active in sports, it is likely that he or she is experiencing the pressure of teen sports, whether your teen is on a school team or a community league of some kind. It’s important to help your teen find some balance.
The advantage of teen sports is that it is likely that your teen is getting plenty of exercise, which helps him or her manage stress and emotions more effectively, as well as maintain health. However, the pressure of teen sports can also result in early and more devastating injuries that did not used to occur in players so young. If your teen is in pain, experiencing symptoms of being overworked, it’s important to send the message that sports isn’t everything.
As well, if your teen is struggling to maintain his or her grades or cannot keep up with the academic demands of school, it may be that the pressure of teen sports is interfering with your teen’s ability to stay academically fit. In order to achieve balance for your teen, consider limiting the number of sports teams you allow your teen to participate in. Develop a relationship with your teen’s teachers and coaches so that if a problem does arise, you can talk to them.
The pressure of teen sports can often be minimized by encouraging your school to participate in academic athlete programs, which require athletes to place emphasis on maintaining good grades and doing well in the classroom in order to be eligible to play. Whether your school has that kind of academic requirement or not, parents can play a role in minimizing the pressure of teen sports by encouraging balance, by speaking out when coaches and athletic programs have the wrong motivation, and by freeing your teen to pursue other interests besides sports when the pressure is too high.
Teen sports are an excellent way for your teen to learn leadership, accountability, and fair play. It is also a great way to help your teen learn how to be active for life and develop a healthy lifestyle. The pressure of teen sports, however, needs to be minimized and kept in perspective, and parents are the perfect people to help teens see that sports can be for fun and enjoyment and not just about the win.
Norbert Georget is an accomplished professional speaker, teen motivator, parenting expert and author of the book, No-Nonsense Parenting For Today’s Teenager – How To Feel Like A Good Parent Even When Your Teenager Hates You. You may get a FREE REPORT called No-Nonsense Parenting for the Disrespectful Teenager. All the answers you’ll need to deal with your disrespectful teenager.
Raising a Well Behaved Fun Loving Teenager – Teenage Parenting 101
Posted by Norbert Georget in About Teenagers, Communication, Disciplining, Main Blog Posts on December 31st, 2009
Raising your teen doesn’t have to be an ordeal (for either of you ). You CAN learn how to enjoy a calm, peaceful, and fulfilling relationship with your teen. The ultimate method in Positive Parenting….
If you wish you knew the secrets of raising an obedient, happy, and polite teen…
…if you wish you could put an end to the arguments, anguish, and stress your teenager is causing in your home…
…or if you just wish you could get them to clean their room and fill the car with gas every now and then…
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click Here
Then you’re going to want to lock the door, take the phone off the hook, and read this page carefully.
Here’s the story….
Waltons… Or Simpsons?
Interesting question. Whether your family is like the Waltons, the Simpsons or the Bundys…
Whether you’re living in the thirteen hundreds, the eighteen hundreds or the twenty-first century, it’s never easy raising a family.
Each and every one of us though will have something in common with the mythical characters and our counterparts of yesteryear.
To go from baby to toddler to mature adult, there’s one stage all kids will definitely need to go through regardless of anything else, and that’s adolescence.
Or in other words, the teenage years. Dun-da-DAH! This is when you’re supposed to hear the music from the movie ‘Psycho‘ echoing in your head.
Okay, maybe it’s not that bad.
But ask yourself this question: is your family closer to the Waltons…or to the Simpsons?
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click Here
Which Teen Is Yours?
The anguished teenager, the rebellious teenager, the bookworm, the go getter, the jock, the cheerleader, the nerd, the mixed up one who’s not popular but has the potential…the list of teenage stereotypes is practically endless, and if you look hard enough you’ll always find a teenager that will suit one of these stereotypes.
If you look harder still though, you’ll see that some facet of their personalities will fit each and every one of these stereotypes.
So what do you do then?
Raising a teen is hard enough, if you don’t know what mold they fit into how can you proceed any further?
That’s easy really.
And answering that question is what led Vanessa Thomas to start doing the research and coming up with the answers to her own kids problems.
In the process she learned a lot of things that can be helpful to any parent struggling with a difficult (or soon-to-be- difficult teen).
She wrote all about her triumphs and strategies to parenting teenagers to becoming well behaved fun loving teenagers in her new book called….
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here for more info.
It comes in an ebook and audio book form.
In her book, Teenage Parenting 101, you’ll learn:
===> You don’t have to spend a alot of money and buy your kids “Stuff” to have them turn out right.
===> You won’t need to try out any weirdo, new-age, wacko parenting stuff.
===> How you can avoid the big problems of drugs and sex.
===> It can be easier than you ever suspected to raise great kids.
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here
She put all this information into a fast-reading, easy-to-follow ebook (electronic book) you can download in mere seconds from now.
Once you get a copy of this book and follow its instructions…
Your Friends Will Be Astounded
By The Change In Your Teen
Maybe your friends are accustomed to nodding wisely, clucking about how tough you have it with your teen.
They might give you lip service about how sorry they are that you’re having problems with your children.
You and I both know that in their secret heart, they are thinking, “That could never happen to my child.”
Imagine how amazed they’re going to be when your kid does a complete turn-around, thanks to what you learn in Vanessa Thomas’s book.
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here
It’s about 100 pages of nothing but the solid, useful truth.
And when I say useful, I mean it!
… Just Some Of What You’ll Learn
In Teenage Parenting 101
Here’s just a little taste of what’s inside this book (which you can be reading in less than 2 minutes from now if you want)…
===> The teenage “identity crisis” - why it happens, and what you can do about it. (page 18)
===> Rebels without a clue… it’s wired into teens to rebel. But they often don’t even know why. How you can cope. (p. 19)
===> Communicating across the chasm. Simple ways you can bridge the age gap, communicate with your teen, and help them to be independent without being delinquent. (page 26)
===> The guaranteed way to keep track of your teen. Want to know who they’re with and what they’re doing? Do this, and you will always know. (page 35)
===> Facing peer pressure. Despite what your teens say, they need your help with peer pressure. You can help — if you just know how (hint: it has nothing to do with “just say no”). (page 41)
There are 3 other bonus gift items for you, plus she also has an 8 Week Unconditional Guarantee. So you can’t lose…
So if you want peace of mind in your home with your teens, along with you standing proud knowing that you did a good job with raising and developing such great fun loving teenagers, you got to check this out right now….
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click here
All my best,
Norbert Georget
PS. I made arrangement for you to get it at a discounted price, but only until this Saturday at midnight. So you better check it out today…
Teenage Parenting 101 <=== Click Here
Money Talk With Your Teen
Posted by Norbert Georget in Communication, Main Blog Posts on November 21st, 2009
Teaching your teen to be responsible with money can be a challenge. Most of the parents I talk are frustrated because they do not feel that their teens understand the value of money – or how hard it is to earn.
You can teach your teen to be responsible with money, though, by taking a very simple approach: let them have some, let them choose how to spend and save it, and help them understand banking choices. Given the economic crises that continue to happen, this is a skill that can serve your teen throughout life.
Purchasing Power
The first way to help your teen understand how to be smart with money is to talk to them about the value of what they purchase. Take them shopping with you when they are young. Let them help you determine what is a good buy and what is not. Show them how to shop by comparing the price per unit instead of just the total price. Help them recognize marketing ploys that are intended to part them from their cash.
Give your teens an allowance or let them earn money doing chores, odd jobs, or having a part time job. Teach them to save a portion of what you give them and let them spend some. Allow them to make decisions about what they spend, even bad decisions. They will learn quickly what buyer’s remorse feels like and become more selective with what they buy.
Teen Checking and Savings Accounts
Your bank should offer some sort of free checking or savings account or student checking or savings account that you can help you teen open. Having a bank account is one of the best ways to help arm your teen with the money knowledge he or she needs to get through life. Help your teen learn how to balance the bank statement, and teach him or her about the different kinds of accounts there are available. Even if your teen only adds $25 a month to a savings account, they can have $300 plus interest at the end of a year.
Teens and Credit
While credit rules continue to change, college age teens are heavily marketed by credit card companies and often get way over their head with debt. As well, teens often must take loans in order to fund their education, particularly in the Canada and the U.S. Help your teen develop good money habits and establish a good credit rating with a credit card. Teach them to use the credit card but pay it off each month. Help them shop for the right credit card with the best interest rate and terms to give them habits that will serve them well throughout life.
Your teen will benefit from having spending and saving, so the more exposure you can give them to things like grocery shopping, decision making with large purchases, and banking will provide them with the necessary skills to manage effectively throughout life. Start talking to your teen about money early – it is an investment that will pay huge dividends.
Norbert Georget is an accomplished professional speaker, teen motivator, parenting expert and author of the book, No-Nonsense Parenting For Today’s Teenager – How To Feel Like A Good Parent Even When Your Teenager Hates You. You may get a FREE REPORT called No-Nonsense Parenting for the Disrespectful Teenager. All the answers you’ll need to deal with your disrespectful teenager.
Common Teenage Problems
Posted by Norbert Georget in About Teenagers, Main Blog Posts on September 23rd, 2009
The teenage years are fraught with all kinds of problems. A parent needs to understand the different pressure a teenager faces in order to help the teenage child through all of them.
Physical Features
One of the biggest worries for adolescents is their physical appearance. Changing body shape, hair in unlikely places, spots breaking out – no wonder teenagers spend so much time looking in the mirror.
If your teen isn’t happy with what they see, fully clothed or in their bedrooms – and few are – it can dent his/her self-esteem.
Try to avoid making jokes about your teen’s appearance – even if it’s meant in a light-hearted way. Some worries may seem silly to you (from hindsight). It will be a mistake to make light of something that worries a teenager. Always pay attention and deal with even trivialities.
Try to explain that other people rarely notice the kind of detail they seem to worry about.
Encouraging a teenager to feel good about themselves solves a great deal of the problem.
Failure
Some teenagers take failure – in exams or relationships – in their stride and get over it relatively quickly, but for others it can seem like a major crisis. Even though you know the failure came as a result of carelessness on the teenager’s part. It is more effective when you help deal with their emotions first.
Rebellion against even you, the parent is a common reaction. Reassure your teenager that your love and support is not contingent on exam grades. If your teen doesn’t get the grades expected, help him to keep it in perspective – everyone has some setbacks in life. He can always do resists. Reassure him that you’re solidly behind him, and help him to review all the options.
————————————————————————————————
Norbert Georget is an accomplished professional speaker, teen motivator and author of the book, No-Nonsense Parenting For Today’s Teenager – How To Feel Like A Good Parent Even When Your Teenager Hates You.
For more Valuable Resources and FREE REPORTS go to:
http://whattodo-disrespectfulteen.com/ for help with a Disrespectful Teen
http://howtostopmyabusiveteen.com/report/ on how to code with an Abusive Teen
http://howtomotivatemylazyteen.com/ on what to do with a Lazy Teenager
Staying Connected in a Disconnected World
Posted by Norbert Georget in Communication, Main Blog Posts on September 16th, 2009
I’m having lunch with a friend, or am I?
We seem to be sitting across from each other at the same table, but we are not having a conversation. She is having a conversation with someone else, on her cell phone. She proceeds to ask this other person how she is doing, how is the dog, and did she pick up her dry cleaning. I sit there pretending to have lunch with her, when apparently she is having lunch with someone else.
How connected are we? Technology keeps growing to make it easier for us to stay connected, and all that it seems to be doing is making us more disconnected. When I was young, if I wanted to talk to a friend, I ran across the street and talked to them face to face. Today I can’t seem to make it through lunch with a friend, without a copious amount of cell phones ringing, pulling us away from each other.
I was having tea with my 17 year old Goddaughter and while sharing our brief hour together she text messaged 50 of the 60 minutes that we were together. She acted like she was talking to me, through occasional eye contact, but her attention was somewhere else.
The more technology grows, the further we grow from each other. It is up to us to make sure that we stay connected. The biggest gap that I observe is with teens and their parents. It is hard enough to stay close to our teen with, full time jobs, household duties, social obligations and teens simply not wanting to be connected to their parents.
Teens are heavily into technology. They love it and they are good at it. How do we stay connected to our teens in such a disconnected world? It takes extra effort! How important is it to be connected to your child?
Our job as a parent is to teach our children how to become responsible adults, who care about themselves and others. Can we do this if we are not connected to them? I don’t think so. What is a responsible person? It is someone you can count on, who makes good decisions for themselves without doing harm to others. Our teens have to feel comfortable to come to us with problems they are having, if we are to influence them.
The first thing we have to do is make sure that we are spending time face to face with them. Secondly, asking them questions, it’s important to help them problem solve, give them the opportunity to develop the tools they need to become responsible adults. It’s critical for the growth and development of our children to socialize face to face. It’s okay to allow them to have a computer, and a cell phone. It’s just not okay to let those objects become their way of life.
Here are some tips on how to stay connected to your kids:
- Make sure you have time everyday, whether it is dinner or just evening time together, where all phone are off and the family spends time together face to face, talking about what ever comes up.
- Once a week do something fun together, play a game or do something outside the house that keeps you connected, not a movie.
- Keep their computer time to a limit.
- When you are having a conversation with your teen, ask them not to text message while talking to you, and explain why.
- Encourage your teen to get together face to face with friends more, and spend less time texting and e-mailing their friends.
- Open up your house for your teens to have friends over to get to know them and make your house the place they can feel comfortable.
- Use every opportunity to talk to your teen about any issue, and keep your opinions to yourself. Let them explore their thoughts around certain topics. This teaches them how to make decisions for themselves, and more importantly it keeps them from shutting down.
- Understand that they are teenagers, and it’s important for them to text message, e-mail their friends, and have computer time. So don’t swing too much to the other side.
- Explain why it’s so important to stay connected face to face and not get totaling sucked into the wild world of technology.
Debra Beck, Author of
My Feet Aren’t Ugly, A girl’s guide to loving herself from the inside out
Debra Beck, Author of award winning book My Feet Aren’t Ugly, A girl’s guide to loving herself from the inside out, is a devoted mentor for teenage girls and parents on issues facing teenage girls today. With 20-plus years experience in self-development, and first-hand awareness of how difficult the teenage years can be, empathy, and a passion for making a difference, Debra discovered her life’s work: helping young girls learn to truly love themselves from the inside out and mentoring parents so they can help their teen have a better sense of them self. My Feet Aren’t Ugly.
For more Valuable Resources and FREE REPORTS go to:
http://whattodo-disrespectfulteen.com/ for help with a Disrespectful Teen
http://howtostopmyabusiveteen.com/report/ on how to code with an Abusive Teen
http://howtomotivatemylazyteen.com/ on what to do with a Lazy Teenager
Ask The Expert Teleseminar – World Parent Summit
Posted by Norbert Georget in Communication, Disciplining, Main Blog Posts, Mixed Family, Parenting Tips on September 10th, 2009
Parenting Teenagers – Getting Them to Talk
Posted by Norbert Georget in About Teenagers, Communication, Main Blog Posts on August 25th, 2009
A sullen, non-communicative teenager. A frustrated parent.
Is that the way it is in your home living with your teenager?
Parenting teenagers is a demanding job, no doubt about it. Teens have the natural ability to challenge us on every level. Whereas once they simply accepted our authority as parents, no more.
Many parents fight against this normal developmental phase. As a result, their homes become tense battlegrounds as they stand ready to defend their positions at a moment’s notice. Usually, in this environment, a teen starts out yelling and ends up silent.
Because he or she has found somewhere else where their voice can be heard. And appreciated.
While some teen frustrations are firmly rooted in parenting issues from the child’s younger years, if you have an otherwise well-adjusted teenager who simply has stopped talking to you, there are practical things you can do that will help.
I am currently parenting my third teenager and these communication tips are what we use in our home everyday to keep talking alive and well.
– Listening comes first.
Trite but true, your teenager will tune you out if you never *really* listen to what she has to say.
You want to get your teen’s attention? Then learn to listen with your whole being. Use your body language and lean closer when he’s talking. Make eye contact. Repeat back what you hear so you’re sure you understand every ounce of what your teenager is telling you. Ask clarifying questions. Empathize. Give him your undivided attention (no cell phones, newspapers, no half-hearted ‘uh-huh’s’).
In other words, listen to your teen the way you wish you were listened to.
If you do this one step regularly, your teen will seek you out, yearning to talk to you.
Imagine that.
– Respect is king.
It’s easy to be condescending when parenting teenagers. As parents, we know more than they do, right? We’ve been around the block numerous more times than they have. Heck, compared to them, we are wise!
However, here’s the real deal. If teens don’t feel respected by us, they don’t accept our influence.
And all that wisdom goes down the drain.
That fact is not limited to teenagers, by the way. That’s the way we’re all wired as human beings. And it helps a lot to remember your teen is perilously close to being an adult and feeling the way adults do. Your teenager is not all grown up yet, but close enough to give you clues as to what they need.
Like respect. Earn their respect and they will trust you with their lives.
– Teamwork means everything.
Teenagers often feel like they’re carrying the weight of the world on their shoulders. It’s easy for us who are parenting teenagers to look at their day-to-day lives and say, “that’s nothing! Wait until you have MY responsibilities!” But what we as parents forget, is that our teen is new at these types of responsibilities. So problems that we can see obvious solutions to, our teens find overwhelming. Challenges that would slide off our backs, they get lost in.
As a person, it’s humiliating to admit you’re overwhelmed and lost. So you don’t. And neither does your teen.
Teamwork changes that. For example, a parent who’s noticing their teen is struggling with academics has two choices. Yelling (ever noticed how often yelling works?). Or leading the way providing training on how to make a positive change.
A parent could say something like “I see you’re finding your current schoolwork challenging. That’s good because it means you have the chance to learn something new here. I have some methods that have worked for me when dealing with challenging work and I’d be glad to show them to you. When’s a good time for you?”
For some teens, that conversation is all they need in order to acknowledge they need help. Others will take more coaxing. Still, the point is valid. Don’t just tell them what to do…work with them, empathize with their frustration, show them how to set a goal, overcome obstacles and come out the other side. Then celebrate with them. They’ve earned it! And you’ve earned their respect.
– Show them you understand…them.
While parenting teenagers, we often lecture as opposed to discuss. That’s only natural for us as parents. Usually we can see their glaring error in judgment and we realize it’s our duty to correct them.
Right idea. Wrong method.
Humility works big time with teenagers. Have you ever made a mistake that your teen seems to also be making? Probably more frequently then you would like to admit. Well, admit it. When you explain the boundaries you are placing on their behavior, let your past example (mistake) be the “here’s what I’ve learned from this problem myself” part of the conversation.
Believe me, you’ll have their attention when you admit to not having it all together. ‘Cuz guess what. Everyday your teen ACTS like he has it all together to cover up the fact that he KNOWS he doesn’t have it all together. And he’s worried and scared.
Your admission you’ve been where he is and you found a way out will be welcome news. That you cared enough about him to share your vulnerabilities won’t be lost on him, either.
Obviously, this parenting tip only applies to age and situation-appropriate confessions. But do you get the point here? Your teen is longing for someone who knows her and is willing to be on her side. Ideally that needs to be you.
Parenting teenagers effectively means building relationships with them, listening when it’s convenient for them (not you), working with them to help them overcome challenges, earning their respect so it’s YOU they think of when they need to talk.
This will take patience, an open heart, thick skin and daily time. Things that all prove to your teenager that you think they’re worth it.
And they are.
Colleen Langenfeld has been parenting for over 26 years and helps other moms enjoy mothering more at http://www.paintedgold.com Visit her website and learn more about parenting teenagers today.
For more Valuable Resources and FREE REPORTS go to:
http://whattodo-disrespectfulteen.com/ for help with a Disrespectful Teen
http://howtostopmyabusiveteen.com/report/ on how to code with an Abusive Teen
http://howtomotivatemylazyteen.com/ on what to do with a Lazy Teenager






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