6 Ways to Communicate Clearly with Your Teen

May 5th, 2008

How would you like to have a closer relationship with your teen again?

Your ability to communicate effectively with your teen is one of the most precious skills you can develop to achieve this goal.

When we think of communication, we tend to think only of the way we can express ourselves. This is certainly important, but listening is the single most crucial of all communication skills.

As a mother of two teenage boys I know that
it isn’t always easy to communicate well with your teen.

It’s particularly frustrating when they aren’t talking to you. However, when I started applying these techniques to our lives, I found that we started getting along better almost immediately. There was less arguing between us, and our relationship became stronger.

1. Make Your Teen Your Focus

Give your teen your full attention. I know that this is a toughie, because we tend to be so busy. It seems like we are always multi-tasking. However, it is important in clear communicating that you make a point of stopping what you are doing and really listen to your teen (rather than just hearing them).

When you give your teen your undivided attention they will know that you care, because you took the time to listen, and it will increase the chances that they will listen to you.

2. Get the Details

Hear what your teen is really saying! Teens tend to give terse answers to questions, leaving out details that may be important. It’s
up to you to be able to get them to open up and draw them into a conversation.

Here is an example:

Teen: “I hate my teacher!”

Parent: “Oh, you don’t really mean that!”

Teen: “Yes, I do, I double hate him!”

Parent: “Well, I don’t want to hear that kind of talk. I am sure you don’t really hate him!”

Teen: “Yes, I do so, I hate all teachers!”

Parent: “Do you think hating your teachers is going to get you a good mark?”

And on and on the arguing goes….

Here’s an alternative:

Teen: “I hate my teacher!”

Parent: “Wow, you don’t normally hate anybody. What did he do to get you talking like that?”

Teen: “A couple of kids didn’t have their homework finished again today, so he decided to punish all of us by giving us a math test tomorrow!”

Parent: “That doesn’t sound very fair!”

Teen: “No, it isn’t fair at all. I wanted to go over to Rachel’s tonight to hang out and listen to music. Instead I have to study for that stupid test. I am so mad at my teacher! He ruins everything!”

Parent: just listening…….

This teen was able to express herself and felt validated by her parent.

You will notice that the parent didn’t argue about the feelings the teen had. You don’t have to agree with your teen’s feelings; just acknowledge them. There is no such thing as a wrong feeling. We can’t help what our teens may feel, however, we should set limits on behaviors that don’t satisfy what we consider appropriate behavior.

Expressing one’s feelings is a healthy thing; although negative expressions of one’s feelings should be avoided; like screaming or name calling. A good way to avoid this is using ‘time outs’ - wait and continue the conversation when everybody has calmed down.

3. Open-Ended Questions

Questions can be crucial to communicating with your teen. Ask them questions that they can’t just answer with a “yes” or a “no”.

For example in the above scenario the parent could ask the teen, “What could you do to help your teacher change his mind about the test?”
Teen: “I am not sure - this guy is so stubborn!”
Parent: “If you talked to him and came up with better ways for him to deal with the kids that aren’t doing their homework?”
Teen: “Mmhhh, maybe I could give it a try….?”

4. Criticize Behaviors, Not Your Teen

Now, let’s move from the listening to the talking part of communication.
When you want to see a change in your teen’s behavior, use the “when you…I feel…because…I need …” sentence. Using this wording (known as ” I ” message) doesn’t attack your teen’s personality; it merely talks about their action and that you’d like it changed and why.

Here is a scenario you might relate to: The chores haven’t been done and your teen went out instead. This example shows not the best way of communicating by attacking them as a person and making statements you may not stick to anyways.

Parent: “You didn’t do your chores! You are such a lazy slob! You never do your chores and I always have to do them for you. Next time you don’t do them I am going to ground you for a week!
Teen: feeling pretty lousy…

Now here is an example with using the: when you…I feel…because…I need - technique:

Parent: “When you didn’t do your chores before going out, I felt really mad. We had an agreement about chores being done before going out and I need you to do
your part of the chores or I am stuck doing them for you.”
Teen: thinking - “I guess that makes sense.”

Remember when you start a sentence with
“You are such and such”, you aren’t
communicating. You are criticizing!

5. Let the Consequence Fit the Action

A fairly big problem that parents run into is looking for suitable punishment for broken rules. However, the penalty applied usually isn’t related to the teen’s action. As parents, we need to show our teens that each choice they make has consequences.

Parents tend to punish their teens by taking away something the adolescent enjoys; for example, no TV for a week. Take the above example of the unwashed laundry. It would be more beneficial to the development of your teen if you base the penalty on a natural connection between his action and the punishment. A good way of showing the consequences to his action in this instance would be having your teen do your chores as well as his next time, since you had to do his this time. When following this step you are practicing “silent communication” with your teen. Letting your teen experience the natural consequence of his actions speaks louder than any words ever would!
It illustrates to them that they will be held accountable for what they do.

As they grow teens tend to get more privileges from parents. It is important for them to realize that with the extra freedom there is more responsibility that goes along with it.

6. Using Descriptive Praise

We all praise our teen sometimes. We tell them “You are a smart kid” or “You are a good piano player” etc. We mean well, but unfortunately this kind of praise doesn’t get the desired effect of making your teen feel good about himself. Why is that? It is because what we are doing is evaluating their actions. With this type of praise, we
aren’t giving evidence to support our claims, and this makes the praise fall flat, and seem empty and unconvincing.

We need to describe in detail what they are
doing and as your teen recognizes the truth in your words they can then evaluate his actions and credit themselves.

Here is an example (evaluating praise):

Teen: “Hey Ma, I got a 90 on my geometry test!”

Parent: “Fantastic! You are a genius!”

Teen: thinking - “I wish. I only got it ’cause Paul helped me study. He is the genius.”

Descriptive praise:

Teen: “Hey Ma, I got a 90 on my geometry test!”

Parent: “You must be so pleased. You did a lot of studying for that test!”

Teen: thinking - “I can really do geometry when I work at it!”

Describing your teen’s action rather then
evaluating them with an easy “good” or “great” or labeling like “slow learner” or “scatterbrain” isn’t easy to do at first, because we are all unaccustomed to doing it. However, once you get into the habit of looking carefully at your teen’s action and putting it into words what you see, you will do it more and more easily and with growing pleasure.

Adolescents need the kind of emotional
nourishment that will help them become
independent, creative thinkers and doers, so
they aren’t looking to others for approval all
the time. With this sort of praise, teens will trust themselves and they won’t need everybody else’s opinion to tell them how they are doing.

Another challenging problem is when and how we criticize our teens. Instead of pointing out what’s wrong with your teen’s actions, try describing what is right and then what still needs doing.

Example: Teen hasn’t done his laundry yet.

Parent: “How is the laundry coming?

Teen: “I am working on it.”

Parent: “I see that you picked up your clothes in your room and in the family room and put it in the hamper. You are half way there.”

This parent talks with encouragement, acknowledging what has been done so far rather then pointing out what hasn’t been done yet.

“Parents need to fill a child’s bucket of self-esteem so high that the rest of the world can’t poke enough holes in it to drain it dry.”

- Alvin Price

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

For more helpful information and examples on good communication with your child I highly recommend the book by Adele Faber & Elaine Mazlish called: How to Talk so Kids Will Listen and Listen So They Will Talk,
Publisher: Harper, ISBN:0380811960.

Also, in the Fall 2005 a new teen version of the book is scheduled to be published -
“How to Talk so Teens Will Listen” -
ISBN: 0060741252.
Keep your eye out for it!

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Is your teen going through a difficult time?

Sign up yourself and tell your teen about the FREE Teenacity Guide 4 Teens: 6 Tips to increase your teen’s confidence and help her achieve her goals not matter what her life is like now!

Visit http://www.teenacity.com/parents.htm

TEENACITY - HELPING YOU HELP YOUR TEEN

Tags: communication, , , , , , , confidence building, Encouragement, guidance, parenting, Self esteem, teens

Tune In To Your Intuition

April 25th, 2008

We humans are intuitive creatures. We have the ability to gain insight into our surroundings and experiences by listening to our inner voice. Our intuition is that quiet nudging that says, “Stop and talk with her,” “Turn here,” or “Something about this place does not feel right.”

Our world today is filled with signs that instruct, maps that guide, how-to books, all which lead us where we want to go. Mainstream society lauds rational thinking and logical decision-making. All these tools help us on our journey. The problem comes as we give our power over to the intellectual and take ourselves out of the active process of listening. We learn to shut down our sensitivity to our “gut instinct”, and in doing so, miss out on using a very powerful gift.

Cultivating your intuitive sensibilities is not difficult. Begin by paying attention when you feel indecisive, “Should I do this, or that?” Take a deep breath and turn your attention away from the logical decision-making part of you, and toward the messages in your own body. Give yourself a moment or two to discover what your intuitive-self is saying to you.

A great question to ask yourself as you go through this process is, “Which choice rings true for me?” Don’t be discouraged if you don’t feel particularly led one way or the other - it might take you a little time to get tuned in. However, as you practice this technique of quiet listening, you will find that you are tuning into your own body messages. The more you practice this tuning, the better your perceptions will be. This is a different way of knowing what is right and true. It calls us into the present - the here and now - and invites us to open ourselves to a deep pool of wisdom.

I always encourage clients to start small, and to test out their intuitive abilities in many different settings. You might notice your intuition comes to you as a passing thought. Try to notice and hear those thoughts, then act on them when you are able. It is in the action, the living into the quiet urging that we gain confidence in our intuition. As your experience with this knowing grows, you will begin to trust your intuition more and more. And as you trust your intuitive self, your intuition will strengthen.

Here is another example. This one is more difficult, but makes an important point. At a company party, someone you don’t know approaches you. The two of you begin to make small talk and something inside of you says, “Something does not feel right, this person has weird energy.” Perhaps this message comes to you as tightness in your belly, or an unusual tense feeling in your muscles or throat. Even a change in your breathing can tip you off that you might be in trouble. Here is the rub. We are socialized to believe that we must be polite, that we should stay and talk with people. We should “be nice.” We might think it rude to make an abrupt exit. So therein lies the difficulty, the conflict between your inner voice telling you this person doesn’t feel right - and your socialized, logical voice telling you, “Stay and be polite,” or worse yet, “You are just being silly.”

Sometimes our bodies give us very clear signals when danger is near. This is not a fearful paranoia, but an inner reading of our surroundings. Intuitive insights do not always seem logical at the time, and we can often get caught up in the conflict between logic and insight. However, the ability to hear your inner-wisdom, and act on that wisdom is truly a gift to be cultivated. Listen when your intuitive self talks to you - and act on your intuition as often as possible.

As you experiment with sharpening your intuition, you will get very tangible feedback. Over time, you will develop a very keen sense, and can “read” situations and people with ease. The more you listen to your intuition, the more messages your intuition will send.

As you test these intuitive insights, you will grow to trust this advisor within. You may even start to have insights or “hear” things in very mundane situations. As you experience this fine-tuning of your intuitive nature, you can celebrate both your insights, and your synchronicity with the universe.

© 2006 Cynthia McKenna LPC, NCC - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.

Cynthia McKenna LPC, NCC is a therapist and life-coach who helps people transform their lives. Her goal is to help people have more joy and peace in daily living. Cynthia works with clients throughout the country by phone and online. She also works with clients in her Texas Hill Country office.

To schedule a session, sign up for her e-newsletter, or get more information Contact Cynthia McKenna

Visit Cynthia McKenna’s website http://CynthiaMcKennaCounseling.com

Check out Cynthia McKenna’s Blog: CounselingBlog

Tags: cynthia mckenna, , , , , , , , decision making, guidance, inner voice, intuition, intutive, Self esteem, Self talk


Close
E-mail It