Yes, Please. Whatever!: How to get the best out of your teenagers. Penny Palmano

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try and use example to highlight issues rather than telling them outright.

       Avoid sarcasm.

       Keep a sense of humour, laughter is very de-stressing.

       Try and rephrase questions, such as, ‘Have you done your homework yet?’ to the less controlling, ‘How’s the homework coming on?’When the going gets tough: sit down with a glass of wine and remember how gorgeous they were at 5!

       Give them responsibility over their own behaviour wherever possible.

       Tell them you trust them to do the right thing.

       Try and be enthusiastic and positive about their friends, opinions and hopes.

       Avoid saying in any form, ‘I told you so.’ It’s smug and unnecessary; after all, you should know better, you are the parent.

       Remember they still need your physical affection, just never show it in front of their friends.

       Try and empathize with what’s going on in their head.

       Try and avoid constantly arguing with your partner in front of your children.

       Do not burden them with all your problems.

       Keep a supply of well-chilled wine in the fridge.

      But above all, don’t be scared to parent your teenager, they need you now more than ever.

       What teenagers really need

      What teenagers really need is love, respect, trust, support, understanding, encouragement and responsibility, and not the TV, computer, DVD, iPod, wardrobe full of designer clothes and unlimited allowance as they would lead you to believe.

      The best way to help support your children through adolescence is to be involved in what’s happening in their lives and talk to them on a daily basis. Even as teenagers your children need physical affection from you and they will still learn from example, so make sure you’re always setting a good one.

      Now that your teenagers are leading more independent lives you are less likely to be with them to demonstrate how they should behave. If you simply try and tell them a

      These are what they think they need

      list of dos and don’ts they will see you as being too controlling and probably ignore your advice.

      The most successful way to convey your opinions and expectations of their behaviour is by introducing different subjects into conversations. The car or dinner table are best for keeping their undivided attention.

      Use examples of other teenagers’ behaviour, or use something you’ve read or experienced, or simply put dilemmas to them to see what their reaction would be. For instance, ‘I was on the train the other day and there were four teenagers sitting together, swearing loudly, eating hamburgers and chips that stank the carriage out, and then they left their rubbish on their seat when they left. They were an absolute disgrace, everyone in the carriage was disgusted with them.’ ‘How do you know we don’t behave like that on the train?’ ‘I know you know how to behave and I don’t believe that you would let yourselves or me down like that. I have every faith in you to do the right thing.’

      By using examples to get your point across, your children learn how you feel about issues and how you would expect them to react or behave in similar circumstances. It also offers them the opportunity to ask hypothetical questions.

      For example, ‘You’ll never believe this, I read in the paper the other day that a sixteen year old had slept with this boy and lied she was on the pill, as she hoped if she got pregnant he would become her regular boyfriend. How sad is that?’ Daughters will usually be prompted to ask, ‘What would you say if I said I was pregnant?’ ‘Well, first darling, I would hope that you would wait until you are a bit older than sixteen and definitely in a long-term relationship, then do the sensible thing, use contraception. But what a shame that poor girl was so naive to think that getting pregnant or having sex with someone is going to make him like her more. Boys will nearly always have sex with girls if it’s on offer, but when they know a girl is that easy they seldom want her as a girlfriend.’ ‘But if the contraception didn’t work and I was pregnant, would you throw me out?’

      ‘There is nothing you could do that would make me throw you out, but I obviously wouldn’t be delighted for your sake. It would restrict your future options so much, but if it happened we would work it out. You know you can always talk to me about anything, especially things that worry you.

      Obviously the way you conduct your life and treat people will have just as big an impact on your teenager’s behaviour as what you say.

      And they need all the following probably more now than at any other time during their lives so far:

       Love and attention

       Respect

       Support

       Communication

       Two Love and Attention

      Showing unconditional love towards your children should never stop, whether they are two or thirty-two. It’s just the way you and they demonstrate it that will change. They no longer want to sit on your lap with a bottle of warm milk and be told a story at six o’clock every evening; they would much rather sit on a friend’s lap, guzzling crisps and fizzy drinks (or some sort of alcopop) watching some inherently violent film until three in the morning. But that’s growing up for you.

      Even as adults our needs change. Think back to when you were first married or living with your partner – you couldn’t keep your hands off each other, any excuse, any where: the floor, the sofa, the shower, the kitchen table (pre-kids obviously). However, fourteen or fifteen years on you’d probably blush at the thought of the kitchen table: ‘But I’ve just polished it!/What, with your back?/What, here and now, are you mad?’ In fact, let’s be honest, our idea of multiple orgasm would probably be a day on our own at a health spa being completely spoilt, cosseted and pampered with every treatment known to mankind while quaffing a glass or two of chilled champagne. But it doesn’t mean we love our partners any less or our love has changed (well, hopefully not), it’s just our needs.

      And it’s the same for the parents of teens; your love shouldn’t change, it’s just the way you demonstrate it that will. Your children still love you, they just may not show it in the way they used to. So, although the dynamics of your relationship have changed, that unconditional love must not, although you may feel it’s being put to the test a few times.

      Some parents with teens who are permanently at each other’s throats can forget how much they love their children as they actually begin to think they dislike them. What they dislike, of course, is not them, it is their behaviour.

      how to show love

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