Many parents these days feel that they are not allowed
to discipline their children. Parents need to feel confident that
discipline is an important part of an adolescent's upbringing.
Adolescents need discipline in order to feel secure and safe
while learning to get along with others and to live in society.
The best discipline leads to them learning self-discipline. Often
there is confusion for parents when "discipline" and
"punishment" are talked about. They are frequently used
to mean the same thing, when in fact they are quite different. As
children grow into adolescents they need a different approach
from that which worked well in childhood.
ADOLESCENT CHANGES
This is a time when your children move quickly from being
dependent where they look up to you and usually want to please,
to becoming independent and wanting to make their own decisions
and think for themselves. This path is not always smooth because
the changes at this age are hard to cope with for both you and
your teenager. This is a time to loosen the reins. At this time
your children may seem to temporarily reject your values and it
is easy to become frustrated and distressed and feel that you
have lost your influence and control over them. Shouting,
stubbornness, irrational behaviour, sulkiness and crying may all
be ways of dealing with the strangeness and anxiety felt by
adolescents in coming to grips with the fact that they are
changing. This may be a difficult time for everyone and it
requires consideration and patience.
WHAT PARENTS CAN DO
DEAL WITH THE RELATIONSHIP
- Work on your relationship with your son or daughter first
or no discipline will be successful. Having a good
relationship takes time but having parents spend time
with them is something most teenagers want.
- Listen to their ideas without trying to force your ideas
on them. Take an interest in what is important to them
and you will have a good baseline to work from.
- Trusting your teenager is a valuable ingredient in your
relationship. Trust has to be earned by you both. Remind
yourself that your teenager is struggling with lots of
new feelings and his behaviour could be showing genuine
unhappiness which needs your concern.
SET LIMITS THAT STICK
Teenagers need rules and limits. This works best if you can
work them out with your teenager. This will help your teenager
feel that he has some choice and there is more chance of him
being responsible. Be mindful that limits for 13 year olds are
not suitable for 15 year olds and are far less suitable for 17
year olds.
- Allow for some risk taking, but also keep your teenager's
safety in mind. You need to have some rules that protect
your teenager's safety away from home and some for how he
behaves in the home.
- Try to find out from other parents what limits they are
setting and remember that if you are too far away from
what their friends' parents are doing, you will have much
more difficulty in getting your teenager to cooperate
with you.
- Don't decide on rules in the middle of a crisis,
especially if your teenager is in trouble for doing
something wrong.
- Gradually remove the limits as your teenager begins to
take over the reins of his own life.
WHEN THE RULES ARE BROKEN
Just because rules are broken does not mean there should be no
rules. Remember that whatever you say, your teenager is likely to
see it as punishment and be resentful.
- Don't jump in. Look for the cause. Listen first to what
your teenager has to say.
- Make consequences that fit the broken rules....what works
for one young person might not work for another.
- Your teenager must know very clearly beforehand what the
consequences will be. It is important that any
consequences you set are not so heavy that they stop your
teenager from trying to deal with the situation again.
- Protecting your teenager from all consequences of her
behaviour can damage her learning.
- Set consequences that can be quickly completed and then
give your teenager a chance to try again e.g. "You
came home very late after we agreed on a time, so
tomorrow I will pick you up" or "Tomorrow you
will have to stay home".
- Carry out the agreed consequences unless your teenager
could not have controlled what happened.
- The last word should be yours with younger teenagers.
BE REASONABLE ABOUT WHAT
YOU EXPECT
Parents often feel that most effort is on their part and they
are hurt when even the most reasonable agreements are not kept.
This is normal and part of testing and unless your teenager is
getting into real difficulty it is wiser not to over-react.
Expect and insist on a fair share in helping with chores so
that your teenager feels a part of the family (as well as for
your own benefit). Expect that you will often have to remind her!
Be aware of your own reasons for setting limits and
consequences e.g. are they reasonable or is it just because you
were brought up that way?
What you say to yourself makes all the difference in how you
cope with teenage problems. If you think, "Why should I have
to put up with this behaviour?" you are more likely to act
in a way that drags out the battle than if you think, "My
son is struggling with something at the moment and I need to work
out the best way to sort this out". If behaviour seems to be
getting out of control or there is violence, you need to get
support.
YOUR APPROACH
Expect that things won't always go according to plan, for this
is a time when your teenager will test the limits.
You should be able to be flexible for special circumstances
(e.g. school socials, special parties).
Where there is a concern about safety, you need to hold fast
to your position. The way you handle broken rules is important.
If you lose your cool, your teenager will certainly lose hers.
Making a big scene when your teenager is 10 minutes late creates
unnecessary conflict for all. It is better to not make a big deal
of it and save the consequence for when rules are broken in a
serious way.
Continually reminding your teenager of past mistakes is not
helpful. It is important to give your teenager a chance to try
again after a mistake (this is how we all learn).
Make allowances in times of stress, such as exams or a romance
breakup.
REMINDERS
- Be as fair as you can.
- Check your own expectations - are they reasonable?
- Make the consequence fit.
- Consequences that drag on lose their point.
- Ask yourself how important it is to "win" the
battle. Focus on the important things and learn to
overlook minor ones, even if you know best.
- Remember even when you love your teenagers you can still
get angry and dislike them at times.
- Don't store up bad feelings from the last time your
teenager broke the rules.
- Look after yourself. Get support, talk to others and give
yourself a "break" without feeling guilty.
- Remember that even difficult teenagers usually grow into
responsible adults.
- Hang in there. Don't give up on your child. The best
resource your child has is you.