4 Supportive Things Teens Appreciate From Their Parents

by ParentCo. June 02, 2017

young girl peeking over her book

In high school, the venue where my friends and I saw live music was in a bar. You had to be 21 to enter through the front door, so we’d avoid getting carded by climbing through the fence into their outdoor seating area. The bands played in a separate room, so if we stayed away from the drinking, we wouldn’t get evicted from the dance floor. Either the owners were unaware of our improvised entrance, or they accepted that high schoolers are willing to take any risk. Risk-taking is a hallmark of adolescence, and that’s not just because of social norms – it’s biological. The human brain develops from back to front, with the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that’s responsible for assessing consequences and regulating behavior and emotions, among other functions, being the last to develop. As Dr. Adriana Galván, a scientist at UCLA, explains in her TEDxYouth Talk, the brain matures and develops past childhood and into early adulthood, so middle and high school students don’t yet have a fully mature brain. Studies done at the Developmental Neuroscience Laboratory which Galvan directs, have explored the deeper layers of the brain–the striatum. That’s the key component of the body’s reward system, taking copious notes about what we find pleasurable, to use for future reference. Researchers found that the adolescent striatum has exaggerated sensitivity. So the adolescent brain is not only more active in seeking out risk, it also responds more intensely to thrills. You might read that and fear, like me, that teens are being set up for failure by their biology. Kids who sneak into bars or engage in risky behaviors are not only blissfully ignorant of lasting consequences, but they’re teaching their brains to crave the thrill, in some cases. But Galván puts it all in a positive light. This wiring, she explains, is built to help teens achieve one of the important functions of adolescence: establishing independence from their caregivers. That push and pull between independence and care is what makes adolescence such an important stage for parents and their children. As we negotiate the give and take, we are determining the parameters of our growing relationship. So how do we use this information to support our teens? Here are four things our teens really wish we would do, to help them learn how to navigate risk.

Listen

When my oldest daughter was nine, I learned a hard lesson when an exchange with some good friends went terribly wrong. It’s almost impossible to discuss problems between a child and another family without anyone getting offended. My impulse to resolve my daughter’s communication issues, however well-intentioned, actually interfered with her relationship– and mine. From then on, I started to literally bite my tongue and just say, “hmm,” when approached by my daughter with a dilemma. It had a really surprising effect, too! She started to be more accepting of others and to formulate her own plans for action and communication.

Get curious

Not all problems, though, can be “hmm’d,” and there are times when it’s necessary to help my teen see unhealthy patterns or to recognize when something needs to be done. That’s when I learned to get curious. I started asking lots of questions to get my daughter’s cognitive juices flowing. “How do you feel about that?” “Did you tell him/her you felt that way?” “Is there something you could do about that?” Avoiding yes or no questions is key.

Let a teen be an expert

Think about a teen who always brings the conversation back around to himself and what he knows about the world. Did you just roll your eyes like I sometimes do? The teen brain generally has a lack of perspective, which can be slightly annoying to everyone else listening. There’s an aspect of that which is also so sweet. When we allow teens to be the expert for a moment, it encourages them to evaluate their own knowledge, so they can hopefully develop a wider perspective on the world.

Practice letting go

Parenting can be such a blur. One minute, you’re holding a new baby, and the next, you’re straightening Letting go means letting kids find their own way, and sometimes that means lifting them up after a failure. When I want to pad the world around my teen so she won’t ever feel any pain or disappointment, I remind myself to engage is some self-care. When I’m centered, then I don’t feel the need to control her world, so I can be the support system she needs. What do you think? Is risk unnecessary, or does it need to be calculated? Does failure have any positive merit, or is it always to be avoided?


ParentCo.

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