My Teenager Can Be So Frustrating
Do you ever feel lost in a conversation with your teenager? You know something is off, but you canāt identify it? And you certainly donāt know what to do. Letās look at an example.
I know a 17-year-old girl, Elyssa, who for years has been a grab bag of trouble: rebellious, difficult at home, snotty attitude, smart mouth, ungrateful, grades dropping, irresponsible.
These problems usually result in severe disabilities throughout adulthoodāemotionally, in relationships, in careers, and moreābut parents donāt pay attention early.
We parents tend to respond only to emotional car wrecks, instead of teaching simple principles that prevent the wrecks. Early on, each undesirable behavior seems small, so we justify them and blow them off.
We say:
- āItās just that age. Sheāll grow out of it.ā
- āSheās in a bad mood.ā
- āIām too tired to deal with this.ā
- āI canāt do anything with her.ā
- āGo to your room.ā
Weāre ignoring the roots of emotional weeds that are springing up and choking the tender souls of our kids. If we ignore the weeds long enough, we canāt save the plant. We must pay attention to our childrenās feelings and behaviors early on, or the day will arrive when thereās nothing we CAN do.
What Is My Teenager Doing??
How Can I Recognize My Teenagerās Problems?
What can you do to help your teenager?
First, recognize whatās happening. Mostly we donāt even SEE what our children are telling us with their words and behaviors.
Letās look at just one incident between Elyssa and her mother. Elyssaās attitude toward her siblings had become quite a problemācriticizing, sniping, controlling, being snottyāto the point that nobody wanted to be around her.
One day Mom said she wanted to meet with Elyssa at 7 oāclock that evening.
Elyssa blurted outāwith quite an attitudeāāAgain? Another meeting?ā
Mom insisted, and Elyssa demanded to know when the meeting would end. āI donāt want this thing to take up my whole evening,ā she said, spitting words like bullets.
Mom said they should be done by 7:30. Elyssa huffed and puffed, but she agreed.
At 7:00, the two began talking, and Elyssa vigorously resisted everything Mom was trying to teach her about feeling loved, being loving toward others, and being responsibleāReal LoveĀ® principles the family had discussed many times before.
At 8:00, Elyssa stomped her feet and barked, āStop talking. Youāre a hypocrite. You keep saying that schedules are important, but youāve already gone half an hour over the time you promised.ā
Mom suggested that they talk more the next day. When Elyssa protested, Mom said, āTomorrow weāll be meeting on Zoom with Greg (me, the author).ā Elyssa didnāt like that, but she was curious.
Parenting Tips for Adolescents: How You Are Manipulated by Your Teenager
How to Deal with an Adolescent
The next morning I spoke with both of them by video. After hearing their stories, I smiled broadly and said, āElyssa, you get quite a kick out of gaming your mother.ā
Immediately she said, āWhat do you mean?ā
Laughing, I said, āYouāre kind of cute when you pretend not to understand me, but you know exactly what I mean. Some of your behavior is unconscious, but Iāll describe it to both of you. Mom, itās your job just to love and teach Elyssa, but without realizing it, what you do instead is play the game sheās created. You allow her to game you.ā
āHow does she do that?ā Mom asked.
āElyssa has taught you that you must never inconvenience or irritate her. Thatās the Number One Rule. Elyssaās entire focus is to do whatever she wants. Then she intimidates you into accepting her unloving behaviors. She does whatever it takesāsnotty attitude and anger, for exampleāto make you afraid of her disapproval. It works, so she controls you.ā
āYouāre telling me that Iām afraid of her?ā
āOf course. No parent likes to see the āI-hate-youā look on a childās face. Youāre afraid of that look, so you give her whatever she wants. When your meeting yesterday went longāa meeting important for Elyssaās LIFE happinessāElyssa stopped the meeting just with her anger at you.
"You kept the rule that you must not irritate Elyssa. You back down from her all the time, letting her get away with being unloving and irresponsible, so she keeps getting away with it.ā
Mom sighed and said, āYeah, I do that.ā
āIf I had been there, and Elyssa had tried to berate ME for going over time, I would have laughed and said, āKid, the only reason this meeting is going long is that YOU are being defensive and snotty. If you were listening, this meeting wouldnāt have lasted more than two minutes.āā
Mom said, āI would never have thought to say that.ā
āOf course not,ā I said. āYou were playing the game. I wouldnāt. I donāt need her approval. Iām not afraid of her irritation. Youāre tired of the game, my dear.ā
Mom was stunned to realize that she had been tricked for so long. Elyssa looked surprised too, that her secret manipulationsāpartly unconsciousāhad been revealed.Being the Parent of a Teenager is Hard
āElyssa,ā I said, āHere are the game rules in your head:
- I am entitled to get whatever I want.
- I can do whatever I want to get it.
- Anybody who gets in my way is the enemy, and then I can treat them however I want.ā
Does that sound familiar?ā I asked.
Elyssa hung her head, while Mom looked like sheād been freed from prison. The secret was out. The game was over.
No More Games with Your Teenagers
Most parents believe that they are obligated to satisfy their childrenās desires. It sounds kind, but satisfying a childās desires often directly conflicts with what a child NEEDS. This can become impossibly difficult for parents to navigate.
Teenagers, on the other hand, have only ONE simple goal: āMEā (themselves). āGive to me, donāt bother me, serve me, donāt get in my way, and give to me again.ā Simpler rules, yes?
And they become VERY good at getting what they want, since they have all the time in the world to focus on themselves and to manipulate their parents to play the game.
Parents donāt even know what the game is, so often, from the beginning, theyāre doomed to lose.
What nobody is seeing is that EVERYBODY who plays the game losesāboth parents and teenagersābecause with all the manipulating, nobody feels unconditionally loved, nobody is truly loving, and nobody is responsible. And nobody is happy. The game is WRONG.
How to Raise Teenagers
So, what can you do instead of playing emotional games with your teens?
Your responsibility as a parent is simple: to LoveandTeach your children, including your teenagers.
What is the job of your children? To listen and to learn to feel loved, be loving, and be responsible.
Thatās it. Those are the rules of happy living, and you must understand them so you can teach your teenagers the attitudes and skills that will make them happy for a lifetime, instead of playing the games where everybody loses.
Learn the rules of lifeāthe principles that govern great parentingāat RealLoveParents.com.
These rules WORK EVERY TIME parents really follow them. But theyāre not for wimps. Effective parenting requires courage and faith, but you will be happy, and so will your teenagers.
You can do this!
Eliminate confusion and conflict with your children.