Raising Great Teens
By: Yana Berlin
Well, I don’t know if there is a secret. But there is a proven formula that produces healthy, happy, well-adjusted teens, and the good news is that it’s rather simple. Here’s the formula:
Start early, be consistent, and don’t be liberal. There’s no such a thing as too early or too young to discipline. Kids need structure, they need rules, and they expect these rules to be implemented. They look for consistency, so be a parent, not a friend. Be firm and don’t flake out on your kids by changing your mind from “no” to “yes” and back again.
Build your child’s confidence by setting boundaries. Experts agree that ages three through 10 represent a golden opportunity to secure strong relationships with your children. This is the time to teach them about values, morals and proper behavior prior. If you wait until after age 10, it may be too late.
It drives me nuts when parents permit everything without consequences and boundaries and then act shocked and surprised when their children begin to misbehave in their early teens. All of a sudden those parents begin to set rules, and are disappointed when those rules are ignored, when their kids are disrespectful, and nothing the parents say or do has an impact.
Childhood is when kids discover their strengths and develop their self-worth and sense of who they are. During this time, parents need to build a sense of confidence in their children that will enable them to stand up to the doubts that persist through adolescence.
Say “no” and mean it. As a parent, it is always easier to say “yes” than “no.” But it is so much harder to deal with a troubled teen that saying “no” makes it worth all the aggravation and hard work. Saying “no” plays a major role in influencing behavior and decision-making, as well as developing attitudes during this stage of kids’ lives. A fulfilling childhood helps kids to deal with some of the challenges and changes that occur during the teenage years. It also gives parents a chance to establish a strong relationship that will help them remain authority figures when their teenagers turn into young adults.
Educate yourself prior to their teenage years. Our children are smart, intuitive and manipulative. Plus, they like to test boundaries. The minute they sense parental confusion, indistinctness and inconsistency, they take charge and begin to act disrespectfully. I remember my five-year old daughter saying to me, “You’re not the boss of me!” That was my first realization that clipping their wings early is just as necessary as educating them. If at age five she did not want me to tell her what to do, there’s no way she would listen at 15 with proper preparation on my part.
It’s imperative to set new strategies to stay in the game. A generation or two ago, parents could remove many of the outside influences our children encounter. But today, with the Internet, drugs, new fads such as tattoos and piercing that becoming more prevalent, it has become far more challenging to mitigate those influences. In these times, consistency is the key.
It’s all about timing. As parents, we need to talk more, listen more and create more hands-on activities to interact with our children. That way, when they reach the stage of raging hormones and screaming rebellion, we can at least reminisce about the old times. And believe me, kids love “kid stories” about themselves.
Here are some tips for communicating with your kids:
Be creative. If you decide to lecture your son or daughter in a parental manner (like we all do), watch how their eyes glaze over and their minds shut down. Instead, mess with their minds like they mess with ours. Create controversial debates on current events in the media. Make it a two-way discussion rather than a one-way lecture.
Discuss real issues such as sex, drugs, relationships, life and celebrities. I used Britney Spears as an example for my kids. With each success she attained, I predicted a future disaster. At first my kids just tuned me out. But when Britney went from sweet little girl to a woman with celebrity status and all hell broke loose, I overhead them telling their friends, “My mom always said she was heading for disaster.” I became an authority, and for a while could get away with pushing my point of view into their little heads.
Use your time in the car to talk with your kids. In the car, kids are your captive audience, so TALK TO THEM! Find out what is up. Don’t grill, just pry a little. If they refuse to talk to you, take the initiative and tell them about what’s going on in your life at the moment.
Reward their responsible behavior with freedom. This doesn’t mean your teenagers’ curfew just got extended. All it means is that you now trust them more and will find an appropriate way to reward them.
Having a child is a lifelong responsibility that requires plenty of reflection and even more unconditional love. We need to keep in mind that adolescence begins as early as 10 years of age and extends to 25. This is the longest parenting stage of all, and it requires a lot of knowledge, patience and stamina.
As I said before, timing is everything. So start early to prevent complications, and don’t forget to tell your children on a regular basis that you love them so.
Yana Berlin is a proud mother of 4 wonderful children and a wife to a wonderful man that she adores.
Her oldest daughter is 20 and the youngest 15. As all of her friends began going through all sorts of changes with their bodies and mind, she took it upon herself to create this community of wonderful women who share the same goals, dreams, issues and fears. She feels that if women continue to help one another through exchange of information, nourishment and support, they will own the world.
Her goal is to connect women all over the world to communicate with each other so they can experience the same support and guidance that she receives from her girlfriends. Please Visit Yana’s site http://www.Fabulously40.com





July 15th, 2008 at 1:25 pm
What a great post Yana! Thanks for being a guest blogger.