Understanding teen behavior

November 16th, 2007

Puberty is a very critical period of a person’s life. It is usually accompanied with physical and emotional changes. Somehow it also modify the person’s  behavioral pattern and even relationships with others. Teenagers usually want independence from parents. They want to create their own identity, values, competencies and skills to survive with the adults.

This independence teenagers want, sometimes, disagrees with the established rules at home. They often tend to negotiate and compromise. However, when things don’t go their way, they rebel which can progress to a bad behavior.

As parents, you should be able to distinguish between normal teenage behaviors and teen behavioral problem. If you fail to notice, chances are your kid will learn a bad behavior. Even so, you should be observant enough to see the early signs of his or her abnormal behavior. You can change such inappropriate patterns sooner.

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Do you know your teen kid?

November 16th, 2007

Obviously, parents know their teenager for every detail – skills, talents, personality and interests. Yet, sometimes  parents forget to consider external factors that might influence or ruin their child’s uniqueness. For instance, peer pressure, media, trend, lifestyle and other modern ways.

The best thing that parents could do is communicate. The key to a successful family has always been communication. By doing so, trust and respect is established. Parents don;t need to be worry about their kid, because boundaries are set. Your teenager will always be reminded of their limitation.

Yet when your kid starts to keep up with everybody else, there is a possibility that his or her values will be swallowed by what the media has been feeding kids of what’s cool or not. You can always remind your teen to stay focus in life. But if you fail, you can help them get back on track by sending him or her to a military school.

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