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Posts Tagged ‘yelling’
Friday, June 26th, 2009

My daughter and her friends drive me crazy, they are always arguing about one thing or another. I am always telling them to grow up and stop bickering.
This is a time when friends play an increasingly important role in their lives. Teens have developed friendships that are more intimate, exclusive, and more constant than in their earlier years. These friendships are an essential component of development. They provide a venue where your teen can explore their identities.
These interactions are very normal for teens. This is how they learn to problem solve with individuals and in groups. These interactions give teens a place to practice and learned how to foster the social skills necessary for future success.
Even though this behavior seems extreme and immature to you, realize that they are not adults; they are still learning how to communicate and develop healthy boundaries. I know many adults that have yet to develop the social skills they needs to have successful interactions with their adult friends.
As a parent, you should look at two things: one- why is their behavior bothering you so badly? Did your parents bicker? Look at what your wounding around this behavior might be. If you are triggered by her behavior, the only way you are going to be able to show up for her is to react through your own fears. If you are reacting to her, she is going to shut down and not hear any words of wisdom you might have around this subject. So, first do your inner child work around her behavior. Second, lets look at how you might be able to show up for your daughter in a different way.
The best thing you can do while they are arguing is, just allow them the freedom to do it, as long as they aren’t physically hurting each other, let them be. If things seem to be going no-where you might let them know your available if they need you, if they say okay, you need to make sure you are not bringing your agenda into their arena. Do not try to solve this problem for them, that’s not what they need or want. You want to ask a lot of questions and if they are not letting each other talk, ask them if they are okay with setting up a format to express their concerns. This will be where each of them will have an opportunity to discuss their feelings around the issue, uninterrupted.
During this time you need to remain open. Do not take sides, or judge the situation, you are simply a mediator. Let each of them express their concerns, and maybe you just keep asking questions. All this does is help them get to the bottom of the problem with an easier format. That’s what you have provided them with, a safe place to explore their feelings and shown them a different way to communicate, by allowing others to express and be heard.
When our teens are working through their issues and we come in and judge them, maybe by saying or thinking that this is an extreme situation and they are being immature, they will shut down to us. If they shut down to us, we are no longer able to offer assistance when they need it; we just add more emotional upset to the situation.
What we want to do for them is help them through there upset by holding a safe place for them to explore their feelings. If we aren’t helping them, we need to know that they will be okay, and not judge they them for the way they want to work through it.
Our judgments only put more distance between our teens and us. If we want to be available for them we have to be willing to not fix things for them and not judge the way the want to fix it.
Remember, this is normal teenage behavior and if this behavior keeps upsetting you, you have work to do.
Tags: anger, arguing, communicate, confidence, fighting, inner child work, judgments, teen social skills, teenagers, unconditional love, upsets, wisdom, yelling Posted in parenting | 2 Comments »
Friday, June 12th, 2009

“Listen to me, don’t talk back, what’s the matter with you? You’re grounded” Who is this Father talking to? It appears that he is talking to his daughter, but his daughter is clearly not there. His daughter is so shut down that she is no longer able to hear what her father is saying.
I felt like my parents didn’t see me, couldn’t see me, because of their own wounds that they had not worked through. Now, I don’t blame them, I know they did the best they could. All I am saying is that because they were unable to do their inner work, they were not able to show up for me.
When I first started working with teens, I noticed that for them to really shift their behaviors, I had to shift the parents behaviors too. If you as a parent are only reacting to your teen and not responding, your teen will never open up to you and allow your guidance.
When we are in our own childhood wounds, we cannot be available for our teens, because we are looking to meet our own needs. We can only step into their reality if our wounded child has been taken care of. This is the premise of my new book “Connecting to your Teen in a Disconnected World”. taking care of our self. It is virtually impossible to be present for someone else if we are not
If you get to know your childhood wounds and how they could show up for you, you will see how it is affecting you, and your reacting to your teen through them.
If your teen does something, lets say she stays out later than her curfew and immediately you go into panic mode, and slip into your fears. She comes home and you start in right away with “Where were you, what were you doing, your thirty minutes past your curfew, your grounded”. Geez, she didn’t even have a moment to tell her mother what happened. So the daughter gets upset and starts yelling and it goes back and forth and ends with the mother saying you’re grounded and walking out. Total Reaction.
The mother was clearly triggered by her daughter coming in late because she has an unresolved childhood wound, maybe her own mother not respecting her and not following through on things she said she would do. If this is the case, she would react to her teen instead of respond.
If the mother would have responded instead of reacted, this is what it might have looked like. Mother says “Are you okay, I noticed you are thirty minutes late?” “Yes, mom I am okay, Jeannie saw Mr. Walker her English teacher at the concert and they were talking”. “I totally understand that things like this happen and what I would like you to do in the future is call me and see if it’s okay if you stay out later. This is our agreement and for your father and I to continue to trust you, you have to make sure your actions are trustworthy”.
This is your opportunity to explain integrity, and trust and its importance. If we react, the learning is missed because they are thinking about how unreasonable you are instead of learning a deeper level of integrity. Reacting has no purpose and only does damage. We have to learn to move through our own woundedness so we can show up for our teens with compassion and clarity. It’s hard to respond to our teens is we are in reaction mode. So, it’s time to do your work around your childhood wounds and do some healing, so you can start showing up for your teen in a whole new way.
Lets me know if you have a situation that you have dealt with regarding responding or reacting and what you did. It’s a tough journey to be working on your childhood wounds and still be showing up for your teens.
Tags: Add new tag, arguing, bossy teens, communicate, fighting, inner child, integrity, love yourself, parenting, reacting, responding, trustworthy, wisdom, wounds, yelling, your grounded Posted in parenting | 1 Comment »
Friday, April 24th, 2009
This is such a tough time for parents, even if you understand what is going on, it can be heartbreaking.
Usually around 12-15 years old depending on the teen, he or she will start pulling away from parents, this is a normal, healthy stage in adolescent development. The teen will pull away from parents as he or she attempts to develop their own identity. It is a natural process for the preparation of leaving the nest. 
I remember my oldest daughter and I were very close, we spend a lot of time together, and we talked about everything. When she was 13 years old, she started spending more time in her bedroom on the phone, more time with friends and most all communication was off with me. I used to go open her bedroom door and say “have you seen my daughter Amber anywhere? She would just say “Mom”, and roll her eyes, and I would laugh and say “if you see her tell her hi” and I would shut the door.
I didn’t try to make her talk to me, or make her hang out with me, and I tried not to take it personally, although I missed her terribly. I remember she started coming back to me about 10 months to a year later.
The more you communicate with your kids when they are younger, the easier these times will be. The pulling away won’t be as extreme, and it might not last as long. If you wait until your child is 12 years old to start communicating with them, I can almost guarantee they are not going to want to talk to you much at all.
You also want to make sure that this is just normal pulling away, not something more. If pulling away is accompanied with yelling, anger, tantrums, erratic moodiness, hostility, and depression, bad grades, and isolation even with friends, there is probably something bigger going on.
Here are some quick tips to make those times easier:
• Don’t take it personally, have fun with it.
• Try talking to your teen about the things he or she is interested in.
• Do family thing on the weekday nights, better chance of participation.
• Understand that this is a time when they need more space, more time with friends and a bit more freedom.
• Pay attention and make sure it’s not something more serious.
• Let them know you understand that it is okay, and that you are available if they need you.
Remember that they come back to you, so try not to pressure them to much during this time so they don’t shut down and never want to come back. That is the good new this is temporary.
I would love to hear how you are handling this issue with your teen.
Tags: Add new tag, adolecent, anger, bad graddes, children, communication, daughter, Debra Beck, depression, development, friends, hostility, isolation, moodiness, My feet aren't ugly, parenting, parents, teenager, teens, yelling Posted in parenting | 1 Comment »
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