|
What to Do When Your Teen Chooses Bad Friends
Recently, a well known educator and speaker on parenting
issues made a list of all the difficult questions parents
had been asking him about their teens. He noticed
that of all the issues that are bothering parents, the
number one concern is what to do about bad friends.
This question was mentioned more than twice as often
as the next most common concern.
This educator then did a very interesting experiment.
At the time he was working with a number of troubled
teens. Many of these teens were estranged from their
families. Some of them had resolved their difficulties
and were already in the process of making peace with
their parents.
He asked these teenagers, "What should I tell
parents so that their children won't have the problems
you are having."
He asked their advice on a number of issues that parents
were finding difficult. In general, these teenagers
had very good advice. However, when he asked them what
to do about the number one issue that was troubling
parents about their teens, none of them had anything
to say.
He then asked these teens what it was that got them
in trouble in the first place. The number one answer
was bad friends.
So the number one issue that worries parents about
their teens is bad friends. The number one cause of
teens getting into trouble is bad friends. And the answer
that these teens gave as to how to help parents deal
with this issue was, "There is nothing parents
can do."
The Reasons
One reason that parents can't separate their child
from a bad friend is that the friend often has a stronger
relationship. When a child is young, his parents are
the major influence in his life. As children enter adolescence
a change occurs. A natural part of growing up is
breaking away from parents and making bonds with peers.
This is normal. If the parent child bond is healthy,
children will eventually renew their ties with their
parents. This happens in the late teens or early twenties.
But throughout most of adolescence, a normal child is
closer to his friends than his family.
A second reason parents find it so difficult to
separate their teens from bad friends is that to put
it simply you can't take away what you can't replace.
Parents cannot replace their child's friends.
What You Can Do
Do Not Attack Your Child's Friends
If your child is running in a bad crowd, your hold
on him is loose or non-existent. The last thing
you should do is to acquire an enemy. If you make a
personal attack on your child's friend that is exactly
what you are going to get, a sworn enemy. This enemy
will now be out to get you and he very likely have more
influence on your child than you.
It will not help to tell your child not to tell this
friend. If you trash your child's friend, this person
will know about it minutes to hours after the words
leave your mouth. You will have made an enemy for life,
at a time when you need every ally that you can get.
This does not mean you cannot criticize the behavior.
It is fair and reasonable to tell your child that you
object to the kinds of things his friend is doing.
However, don't make it a personal attack. Once you do
that, you place yourself in a battle that you are almost
certain to lose.
Enlist Help
As part of growing up, your child is trying to break
away from you and forge his own path in life. This is
normal. However, this need to break away only involves
you. It does not involve other adults. This gives you
an opportunity to indirectly influence your child.
You should try to find an adult or a responsible older
teen that can foster a relationship with your child.
It can be a member of your extended family or someone
in your community. You can have this person keep contact
with your child and try to direct him whenever possible.
If your child is still young, you should take the
opportunity to try to set up a relationship with someone
older while you still have influence. I personally
have set up several adults for each of my teenage children.
These are people my children respect and, though I have
not needed them yet, I know that I can rely on them
if things ever turn sour.
Here is an important point to remember. If your child
is confiding is a responsible adult, then you must be
careful not to pressure your this person to reveal what
is being discussed. You have the right to know some
general answers like if things are okay or if your child
is going through a rough time. But do not press for
information. You may be doing great harm to your child.
Get to Know Your Child's Friends
This is very bold advice, but it usually works well.
You should get to know your child's friends personally.
A number of good things may come out of this.
You may find out that the children with whom your child
associates are really not as bad as your initial impression.
The teen years are hard on everyone. All children have
difficulty. It is very possible you might find that
your child's friends are basically good kids who are
going through tough times.
Here is how you can do it. Pick an event, like your
child's birthday or the end of the school year or some
other special occasion. Tell your child that you want
to take him and four or five of his friends out to dinner
to celebrate. Take them to a restaurant. If you
are going to be embarrassed by being seen with them,
take them somewhere away from your home. If you live
in Brooklyn, take them to a restaurant in Queens. If
you live on the Boston North Shore take them to a restaurant
on the South Shore. You don't have to embarrass yourself,
but you should be subtle about it. Your child shouldn't
be able to figure out that the reason you are driving
20 miles away from your house is that you would rather
be dead than be caught seen with his friends.
Here is what you will gain:
1. You might find that you misjudged these children.
2. You will be giving your child the messages that since
they are his friends, you welcome them.
3. You will be giving your child's friends the same
message. Depending upon their own personal situation
you may be the only adult in their lives that are treating
them as people.
4. You will be acquiring four or five allies who are
in a very strong position to help you at a time when
you need it most.
The Advantage of Having Your Child's Friends as
Allies
The first thing that you need to know is that children
have a very strong sense of right and wrong. They may
be doing the wrong thing, but they are well aware of
it.
Now, picture this scenario. Your child is out with
his friends Saturday night doing what you would rather
not know about. It is 11:30 and you get a call on the
phone. Your child is having a great time and everyone
is still here, can he stay out until 2 am? You remind
your child that he has a 12:00 curfew and he has to
be home. Your child says a few choice things to you
to and slams down the phone.
Now to whom does a teen complain when he is angry with
his parents? His friends. So after he hangs up he goes
to his friend and starts calling you every name in his
somewhat extensive vocabulary. Let's say that this friend
is someone you took out to dinner three weeks ago.
That person might just say to your child, "What's
wrong with you? Your mother is okay. Look, you know
she's right. Why are you giving her such an attitude?"
This teen that you just took out to dinner may send
your child home before any of the real trouble starts,
all because you bought him dinner and treated him like
a person.
Now what would have happened if you had trashed
this person? Do you think he'd be so quick to take your
side? That's the advantage of making your child's friends
allies instead of enemies.
Conclusion
Your teen is going to pick his friends. There is
very little you can do at this age to influence his
choices. However, if you approach the problem with wisdom,
there are a number of ways you can indirectly influence
your child and help him to stay out of trouble.
Author: Anthony Kane MD
Anthony Kane, MD is a physician and international lecturer
who has been helping parents of children with ADHD and
Oppositional Defiant Disorder online since 2003. Get
help with Oppositional Defiant Disorder child behavior
(http://addadhdadvances.com/bbsya.html),
help with defiant teens (http://addadhdadvances.com/teenhelp.html
) ADHD treatment (http://addadhdadvances.com/cylsya.html
) and ADHD information.
Keywords :anthony kane, teen behavior, child behavior,
teen behavior problem, child behavior problem
Content Provided By : SubmitYOURArticle.com
|