The key to
building a positive relationship and sorting out any communication difficulties
with your teenager is to keep the channels of communication open. We tend to
consider the importance of big talks about significant topics with teens, but
the ability to connect when it really matters is often based on the ability to
connect when it doesn't. The way you relate to them in day-to-day life will
make it easier - or harder - to sort out the key issues.
We can get locked
into unhelpful ways of communicating - bickering, nagging, criticising - that
once we're in are hard to avoid. Your teenager may still need your guidance and
the boundaries that you draw and hold, but you may have to get tactical to get
this across. How you assert your authority may need to be different when
dealing with an authority-averse teen rather than an automatically respectful
child.
Your teenager
still needs to know you are interested but watchful, that you care and are on
their side, even if you don't always agree with them. You need to have the
skill and the emotional resilience to go on offering help, even in the face of
indifference and opposition.
Improving your
communication skills
You can reduce
the amount of indifference and opposition from your teenager if you improve
your skills. Teenagers often behave in ways which make it difficult for us to
give them what they need most - love and acceptance. You can't change your
teenager, but you can change what you do - and how you behave differently, it
often results in the other person matching you and altering their behaviour
themselves.
How can you keep
the communication open?
If you want to
keep lines of communication open with your teenager, what should you be doing?
It can help if you:
•
look for
opportunities to talk off-message
•
use 'I' messages
•
use open
questions
•
share something
of yourself
•
treat the young
person as an equal
•
practise what
you preach
•
listen without
judgement or criticism
•
appreciate them
for their positive qualities
•
give
unconditional love but hold strong boundaries over behaviour
•
give frequent
'strokes'
•
include the
young person in family activities but give them the choice to opt out
•
understand and
take action only when asked for help
Talk off-message
Often as a parent
you're so aware of what you see as the important issues you want to discuss
with your teenager - unsuitable friends, doing homework, playing loud music -
that you forget to simply pass the time with them. If your teenager knows that
every conversation with you means a lecture on something, they're going to
avoid them. Some surveys show that the majority of exchanges between parents
and their children entirely involve complaints and rebukes. Some teens say the
only time their parents talk to them is to tell them off. But if they're used
to chatting to you about fun stuff, inconsequential stuff, things they're
interested in and doing, they'll stop and tune in and be relaxed with you.
Then, when you do want to discuss something important or ask them to do
something differently, they're likely to listen.
Use 'I' messages
If there is an
issue you're concerned about, it isn't always effective to broach it with a
'you' message: 'you left the kitchen in a mess'. Instead try, 'I was upset this
morning to find the kitchen in a mess because I had to tidy it up before I
could make breakfast. Next time, please clear up after yourself. Thanks.'
Use open
questions
Using open
questions is another vital tool in making communicating with teenagers easier.
A closed question stops communication rather than starts it, questions you can
answer with a yes or no, such as 'are you going out?, 'do you have homework?'
Closed questions only need a short answer and don't give the opportunity to say
any more. Closed questions can suggest or even tell the person what you want
them to hear. 'Did you have a good time at school today?' implies that you
expect them to have enjoyed school. When we use closed questions as a way of
making a criticism - about their appearance, behaviour, attitude - it's quite
clear the question isn't to be answered, but swallowed. And it's often a quick
step to an argument.
Instead, try an
opener instead. An opener carries with it a different messages, one that says,
'Tell me more, I'm interested and listening.' Some examples of open questions
are, 'Tell me about your day', 'You seem fed up/happy, tell me about it.'
Share something
If you want your
teenager to feel relaxed and happy about sharing their concerns and feelings
with you, it helps to be open yourself. This doesn't mean off loading your
teenager with worries that would frighten them or be innappropriate for them to
know. Young people look to parents to be in control and all-knowing. As they
become teenagers, if you keep up a facade of never having problems yourself,
barriers may emerge between you and your teenager. They may begin to feel
incompetent - that they have all these worries which no one else seems to
share, they may think that you don't share their feelings and therefore can't
appreciate them. When your teenager shouts 'You don't understand', they are
often speaking from the heart and really feel you can't understand what they
are going through. A third barrier may arise if they know that you have as many
anxieties as they do but won't admit it and they are unwilling to open up to
you because they see you as insincere, hypocritical and in denial.
Treat them as an
equal
You may still
feel that your teenager is not experienced enough to cope on their own, but one
day soon they will be. Treating a teenager as an equal does not make them
arrogant or out of control. On the contrary, it gives them every incentive to
live up to your trust. Part of this is accepting that you and they may have
different views, beliefs and opinions, which isn't always easy for parents.
Your teenager may well end up with similar ideas to your, but while they are an
adolescent, trying everything out, they may well diverge and stay that way. Get
used to it and embrace it. You have friends who disagree with you on all sorts
of things but you still like and respect them. You can do so with your own
child too.
Practise what you
preach
One way to lose
your teenager's trust or belief is to tell them to do one thing while breaking
the rules yourself. Lectures on alcohol and drugs may fall on deaf ears if you
drink and partake, even if you think it's different. They may reject your
advice on the grounds that you do it too. They may also decide that since you
ignore your own rules on one issues that they can ignore what you say about
other things too. Modelling good behaviour to them will always be more
effective than preaching it.
Listening without
judgement or criticism
As parents we
feel that we have to guide, instruct and inform to do our job properly. Seeing
parenting as a job where you are in charge gives you a vested interest in
feeling you can solve any difficulties experienced by your teenager. You tend
to think their inexperience is the same as them not being competent or capable.
Standing by and letting them find their own solutions to problems may leave you
feeling anxious and angry. It may be a source of pride that you know best and
make decisions for them which means you get upset and angry when they complain
or resist your help or advice.
What you need to
do is give them the same support that you would a friend - simply listen
without passing comment, without making judgements or offering criticism.
Sometimes you need to give your teenager exactly the respect and behaviour
you'd give a friend. Judging, blaming, criticising and labelling can destroy
self-esteem and cause distance between you and your teenager. It can increase
conflict and make them unwilling to cooperate.
Appreciate your
teenager for their positive qualities
We can all find
things we dislike about our teenagers: their messy rooms, treating the house
like a hotel and they spend too much time on the phone or their computer. But
if that's all you see, you may find it hard to get on. What helps is to make
the positive effort to see what you like about them: their enthusiasm and
liveliness, their kindness and concern, their sense of humour. Look for the
positives and remind yourself of these every time you're tempted to be angry or
upset with them over something you feel they've done or not done.
Give
unconditional love but hold strong boundaries over behaviour
Your teenager
needs to know that you love them, no matter what. But that is not the same
thing as condoning, accepting or allowing their behaviour. When you find
yourself in conflict with your teen it helps to remember that it's the
behaviour, not the teenager, you may not like. And it's the behaviour not the
teenager you may want to address. Much of the time the things they get up to
are normal behaviour for their age and development. But there are obviously
times when you need to address it. Read more about setting
boundaries for teenagers.
The key to being
effective is not to make it personal. Be specific and avoid labels and make
your requests clear. Say, 'You left your coat on the floor. I don't appreciate
having to tidy up after you. Next time, please put your coat in the cupboard.'
This works far more effectively than, 'You're so messy! What am I going to do
with you? I'm not your servant, you know!'
With the second
approach, the teenager is told what they are - messy. No way for them to
change; they're labelled and judged. Why try to do anything to please you when
it's clear you've made up your mind about who and what they are? And by not
mentioning what it is that has upset you, the teenager may not even understand
what they have done wrong.
With the first
approach, the teenager is told exactly what upset you and why and is given a
clear request of what to do to remedy the situation.
Praise
We all need to be
rewarded, to be praised and thanked and appreciated. Sometimes we forget how much
we need to value others and to be valued by them. Counsellors call the sort of
action that gives a lift to morale 'a stroke'. Strokes can be spoken - telling
someone that you love them, thanking them for helping you or saying that you
value them. Or they can be shown by contact - hugging or kissing someone or
giving them a back rub. Or they can be acted out - making them a cup of tea,
giving them a small present or doing a chore you know they'd like done. Sit
down and think about the strokes you think your teenager would like to receive,
or what you'd like to give. Check out the ones you could give - try them out or
as your teenager if they'd like them. Also tell them what you'd appreciate.
Keep the communication going by agreeing to give each other at least one stroke
a day.
Include them in
family activities but with the option to opt out
Teenage years are
really the time when young people begin to have their own social life that they
manage themselves, that includes friends and contacts they've made and often
excludes you. It's the time when family activities may become deeply
embarrassing - they don't want to seem a 'Billy No Mates', reduced to
socialising or going out with family. Even if embarrassment isn't a factor,
they may not want to miss out on anything their friends are doing.
But teenagers can
surprise you and if you assume they want nothing more to do with family events
and leave them out, they may be hurt and rejected. If given free choice, you
may well find they include themselves in family activities more than you'd
expect. If you pressurise, the result may be conflict and arguments. They may
make a stand by cutting off communication and staying away just to make a
point, rather than because that would have been their original preference.
Understand and
take action only when asked for help
Communication
with teenagers is boosted tremendously when they feel you understand them and
what they are going through, and it rises to a new level when they trust you to
butt out when necessary. There are times when they may want you to intervene
and there will obviously be times when they want you to give advice and
support. But in both cases, the relationship will be better and the invitation
to help more likely if they know you will wait for the request, not jump in or
assume it's your right and your place to do so.
This content was
kindly provided by agony aunt and Family Lives trustee Suzy Hayman.
Source : Familylives
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