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ADVICE
Parent
Your Teen with Boldness
with
Whitney Hopler, Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer
Too
often, parents of teenagers back away during the turbulent teen
years, believing that their kids will do best by experimenting
with life and learning from their mistakes. But nothing could be
farther from the truth.
Teens need their parents more than ever. The best thing you could do for your
teen is to get involved in his or her life, providing the kind of hands-on
love and guidance that will make a real difference in your teen's future.
- Help
your teen express himself or herself. Encourage your teen to
talk with you regularly about thoughts, feelings, ideas, goals,
and dreams. Every day, share three things from your own life
and ask your teen to share three things from his or her life
while you listen with genuine interest. Prompt your teen to open
up more by asking open-ended questions. Praise your teen when
he or she does communicate well with you. Understand that your
teen will test you by sharing simple things before deep things;
don't overreact to what you hear so your teen won't clam up.
Remember that all teens want to know what their parents think
and why. Share your own thoughts and feelings with confidence. Try creative
ways to learn more about what your teen is thinking and feeling: working
on a project together (which facilitates good conversation), using your time
in the car together to talk, taking walks together, and inviting friends
over to your home or chaperoning an event where your teen gets together with
friends so you can overhear their conversations.
- Guide
your teen to choose friends wisely. Understand that your teen's
friends will exert a critical influence on his or her life. They
will shape your teen's values and identity. Be proactive about
helping your teen learn how to discern other people's character.
Explain to your teen the reasons behind your commitment to guide
his or her friendships. Monitor your teen's actions and relationships.
Don't be afraid to require your teen to avoid or limit time with
other teens who exert a negative influence, and affirm your teen's
wise choices of friends.
- Develop
your teen's character. Strive to build virtues into your teen's
life that reflect the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace,
patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
Realize that every attitude and action - no matter how small
- matters a lot when it comes to how your teen's character is
developing. When your teen demonstrates self-centred behaviour,
let him or her experience the natural consequences of it. Take
the time to explain why you have set the rules you have, and
be sure to follow through. Help your teen understand how specific
attitudes and actions either honour or dishonour God.
- Help
your teen learn to be responsible and disciplined. Tie freedoms
to responsibilities by refusing to allow your teen to engage
in certain privileges (like talk on the phone or borrow the car)
until he or she fulfils certain tasks that must be done (like
homework or chores). If your teen becomes overwhelmed by his
or her responsibilities, break the tasks down into manageable
segments and monitor your teen's progress to make sure the work
gets done on time. Explain the positive rewards of completing
the work, as well as the negative consequences of not doing so.
If your teen doesn't fulfil his or her responsibilities, calmly
carry out the consequences so he or she will learn to do better
next time.
- Help
your teen learn how to obey from the heart. Know that when your
teen learns to obey authority figures like parents and teachers,
he or she will learn to obey God. Explain what constitutes right
behaviour, and why it's important to act justly. Then set up
boundaries and consequences to follow through. Let your teen
know that God expects obedience all the time - not just when
we feel like doing what He asks. Present a united front with
your spouse when disciplining your teen; if you disagree, discuss
the issue when your teen is not around. Encourage your teen to
constantly consider what's good for others - not just him - or
herself. Help your teen take meaningful steps toward achieving
his or her dreams. Talk with your teen regularly and openly about
issues like staying sexually pure and avoiding drugs. Welcome
any and all questions from your teen, and strive to answer them
well. Make sure you live a life that models the kind of obedience
to God that you'd like to see from your teen. Let your teen know
how much he or she is loved by God, and by you, too. Explain
that obedience is ultimately a way of responding to love with
more love.
- Step
in to prevent disaster. If your child is heading for trouble,
don't just look backward in regret. Instead, learn from your
past mistakes as a parent, then decide to move forward. Have
your teen clean up the messes of irresponsible choices (such
as by setting up a payment schedule to replace a car that he
or she crashed). If your teen has gotten involved with the wrong
crowd, help him or her pursue a healthier lifestyle and direct
your teen toward new friends. Clean up communication problems
by insisting that your teen lets you know where he or she is
going and with whom. When your teen returns, ask for details
of how things went. Set strict rules when it comes to issues
like dating and driving that could be dangerous for your teen
if he or she approaches them the wrong way.
- Insist
that your teen participate in church. Make church attendance
non-negotiable in your family, just like school attendance. Let
your teen know that even when church is boring or other people
at church are difficult, God wants to use church to help him
or her grow in ways that wouldn't be possible outside church.
Besides the weekly worship service, insist that your teen attend
at least one other weekly church activity (such as a youth group
meeting or Bible study). Encourage your teen to go beyond attending
to participating. Affirm your teen's God-given talents and urge
him or her to use them to serve others through your church's
ministries.
- Help
your teen develop a good work ethic. Stop funding areas of your
teen's life that he or she can support through a part-time job
- such as clothes, transportation, and recreational outings.
Help your teen find a job to earn his or her own spending money
and pay for his or her own petrol and car insurance. Show a genuine
interest in your teen's job, and help your teen learn how to
be persistent and strive for excellence on the job. Explain to
your teen the importance of giving his or her best, no matter
what kind of work he or she does, because doing so honours God
and helps your teen grow. Show your teen how to effectively manage
the money that he or she earns.
- Manage
your teen's moods by channelling feelings toward good actions.
Understand that all teens experience intense emotions like pride,
love, sadness, anger, fear, shyness, embarrassment, and happiness.
Remember the intensity of the feelings you experienced when you
were a teen so you can empathize with your teen. Teach your teen
that feelings shouldn't control him or her. Instead, they are
gifts from God that should point him or her toward constructive
actions. Let your teen know why his or her emotions occur, and
work with your teen to figure out what to do about them.
- Handle
rebellion with loving firmness. Always explain the reasons behind
what you're asking your teen to do. Try to keep calm during conflicts.
Focus on discussing the issue at hand rather than attacking your
teen personally. Use positive reinforcement as often as possible.
Be consistent and dependable, keeping your rules no matter how
much your teen rebels. Know that, eventually, your teen will
be glad to have the security the rules provide. As you implement
the rules, however, be sure to do so with the goal of loving
your teen as God loves him or her.
- Adapted
from Bold Parents, Positive Teens, copyright 2002 by Karen
Dockrey. Published by WaterBrook Press, a division of Random
House, Inc., Colorado Springs, Co., www.waterbrookpress.com.
- Karen
Dockrey, the parent of two teenagers, is a youth minister and
writer who has walked through the teen years with hundreds of
teens and their parents. Her books include When a Hug Won't
Fix the Hurt, The Student Bible Dictionary, and The
Youth Worker's Guide to Creative Bible Study. She lives with
her husband and teens near Nashville, Tennessee.
©
Christian Family Network
is run by CPO, supported by
Care for the Family, Marriage Resource, Positive Parenting,
Care, Women Alive, Christian Herald and many others.
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