



(15 ratings)
In the last year, Marilee went into therapy and started to learn about self-care. She realized that she had been allowing her three children, who are now teenagers, to run all over her.
"How do I deal with my teenage kids now that I have had some recovery? I am struggling with setting healthy limits, with knowing what is a healthy boundary. What do I do about setting limits around TV and computer use? How do I set up a structure for chores? What do I do to encourage them to start to take personal responsibility?"
The first thing that Marilee needs to do is accept that she has no real control over her adolescent children. At this age, and having been given little responsibility and limits, it is unrealistic to expect them to suddenly do what she wants them to do. In addition, they are not at all used to considering the effect their behavior has on her. Because she had not been taking care of herself, they had not learned to be considerate of her or helpful toward her.
However, this does not mean that their behavior will not change. It will not change in response to her demands or limit setting, but it may change in response to HER changes. Instead of trying to control them into taking personal responsibility, Marilee needs to be a role model of personal responsibility.
One aspect of her taking personal responsibility may be to speak openly with her children. She can share with them why she chose to be permissive in the past, and why this is not working for her now. She can ask for their help in what to do about the TV, the computer, and chores. Most children are far more willing to help when they are part of the process of finding solutions than when rules are imposed on them.
Children are naturally helpful and considerate of their parents and take far more responsibility for themselves when their parents are role modeling personal responsibility for themselves. As Marilee continues to learn about taking loving care of herself, she will naturally stop allowing her children to control her and let go of trying to control them. As she learns to stay tuned into herself and take care of her own needs and feelings, her children will begin to learn to do the same. All people, and especially children, respond to ENERGY far more than to actual words. When Marilee's energy is kind and personally powerful, her children will naturally begin to respect her. As long as she is trying to control them and/or allowing them to control her, they will have no respect for her and will be resistant to doing what she asks of them. But when they experience her as loving and secure within her self, they will be far more likely to respect her and care about her concerns.
The bottom line is this: people tend to treat you the way you treat yourself. If you ignore your own feelings and needs, they will tend to ignore you as well. If you judge yourself harshly, they will tend to be judgmental as well. If you try to control them into doing what you want, they will tend to be resistant.
Doing your own inner work and becoming a happy, secure, personally powerful and personally responsible person is the very best way of influencing your children to do the same.
20 Random Tutorials from the same category :
Is Work Or A Divorce Keeping You From Your Child?
Give Children a Choice for Read-Aloud Books
8-Step Guide to Messing Up Your Kids
Helping children to be active and encouraging children to exercise
Do You Know What Is The Purpose Of Kindergarten?
Making Homework Fun for Kids
Preschool Education - Getting Used to People
Interrupting the child
The Impact of Toys in Child Development
Parenting: Emotional Incest
Good Parenting Advice - What Every Expectant Parent Should Know (But Nobody Tells You)
Parenting: Prescribing the Symptom
Parenting Adolescents When You Have Changed the Rules
Child and Toddler Development Stages
Good Parenting Advice - Why You Should Let Your Children Help in the Kitchen
Good Parenting Advice - The Gift of Self Knowledge
Preschool Education - The Basic Skills of Kindergarten
How To Find Fabulous Mothers Birthday Gifts
Activity Preschool Education - But Why Can't I Say That? And More Parenting Advice
Preschool Educational Games For Maths, Easy As 1,2,3...














