Positive Parenting for Those Important Teen Years Adolescence is often a time of great stress and turmoil—not only for kids going through it, but for you, their parents as well. During the teen years, kids aggressively begin to explore a new sense of freedom, which often leads to feelings of resentment and powerlessness for parents who increasingly are excluded from their children's lives. This revised edition of Positive Discipline for Teenagers shows you how to break the destructive cycle of guilt and blame and work toward greater understanding and communication with your adolescents. Inside, you' ·Find out how to encourage your teen and yourself ·Grow to understand how your teen still needs you, but in different ways ·Learn how to get to know who your teen really is ·Discover how to develop sound judgment without being judgmental ·Learn how to use follow-through—the only surefire way to get chores done Over the years, millions of parents have come to trust the classic Positive Discipline series for its consistent, commmonsense approach to child rearing. Inside, you'll discover proven, effective methods for working with your teens. Over 1 million Positive Discipline books sold! "I highly recommend this book to parents, teachers, and all others who work with young people. It is one of the best books I have seen on helping adults and adolescents turn their conflict into friendship. Remarkably, it shows how to accomplish this while helping young people develop courage, confidence, responsibility, cooperation, self-respect, and trust. I urge you to read it." — H. Stephen Glenn, Ph.D., coauthor of Raising Self-Reliant Children in a Self-Indulgent World .
I realized a few months ago that starting next year, I was going to have 13 straight years of one or more high schoolers living in my home, so maybe I should start thinking through who I want to be as a mother of teenagers. And somehow figure out how to be that person while also being the right kind of mother for the preschooler. Still working on that. Anyways, a friend of mine has been teaching a class for her congregation on raising teenagers, so I jumped on that ship, and this was our text for the class.
As I'll say with any parenting book, I don't agree with the author 100% of the time. Every child, parent, and family dynamic are different, so there isn't going to be a magical book that fits perfectly and solves every problem. In particular, I was not a fan of the authors' obvious prejudice against using mental health medication. While I agree with them that medication alone isn't enough, let me tell you, the right medication in the right situation can bring you to the right mental place where you can do that necessary emotional work. For real, I can't even count the number of people I know who have had it transform their life for the better. So I didn't love their frequent jabs at using antidepressants, etc. There are also strategies they talk about that are just impossible in families with more than two kids.
I also wish the authors had provided more guidance for parents that are trying to parent within a cultural/spiritual/ideological framework - they acknowledged that it exists, and I recognize that being comprehensive would be impossible, but it feels like one of the biggest sources of tension between parents and teens (at least from where I'm sitting in my immigrant-heavy neighborhood), and some acknowledgement that this dynamic is at play would really help.
That said, this book really had a lot going for it, and I've already seen results from some shifts in my parenthood.
First of all, family meetings. Holy moly. It sounded very Leave it to Beaver, but that formula of compliments-calendar-issues has been magic. OK, and it helps that I pay them their weekly allowance at the end, so they're always excited to come. But raising peacemakers (rather than conflict avoiders) is an important part of our family values, and it is awesome that when a conflict comes up, we can say, "let's discuss this at the family meeting," give everyone uninterrupted time to say their piece and be heard, and then brainstorm ways to meet everyone's needs. The kids have generated some really great solutions to their problems, and we've even had times I've put something on the agenda for the meeting, and they've already solved it using that kind of listening before Sunday rolls around. And I think having a built-in place for us to recognize the good things others are doing is just lovely, and a great way to set the tone.
Second, it really reminded me of how it feels to think like a teenager. Sometimes I look back at my teen years and wonder why I did such idiotic things, but reading this helped me see that I did in fact have a logic behind what I was doing, and while I haven't had a good opportunity to apply the principle with my kids, I feel like I have some good strategies in place for getting down to what is really going on when things get wonky.
Finally, I love how much respect it shows for the teenagers themselves, and the process of growing up. I love that it places value on giving teenagers opportunities to figure out what is really important to them and make decisions based on that, explore their identity, make mistakes, learn from their mistakes on their own, listen to the views of others, have a place where they can see true listening modeled, and grow in responsibility. And it helped me think through what decisions I need to make to give my teens opportunities to develop in ways that fit our family values. This was a good reading experience for me.
I read this book mainly because of my work. I’m not a parent, but I’m always in touch with teenagers in the classroom. I’m an English language teacher based in São Paulo, Brazil, and I can safely say that this book has given me a lot of useful insights and I do feel more resourceful now. I’m looking forward to reading Positive Discipline in the Classroom now.
Some good info on being positive and communication, but I didn’t see any discipline in this book and overall I just found it confusing with a lot of what not to do and not so much of what TO do.
My daughter noticed this book on my tablet and asked why I was reading it. Thankfully things have gone well so far on this teenage journey; however we are only just at the beginning. I told her that I would rather gather information before there is a problem so when and if those problems arise I might better handle them. She replied by telling me how smart of a mother she has; I rather love her. I found this book by accident and it couldn't have come at a more perfect time, when I need to start reprogramming the way I respond to my daughter and releasing some of my perceived control that I had over her during childhood. While I didn't agree with all the advice given, particularly in regards to how to handle teenagers who drink and drive, the majority I did. I will, and already have, recommend this book to parents of teenagers particularly in the earliest stages; although it is never too late to do and be better. The layout is enjoyable with many personal accounts of parents sharing their own stories, both successes and failures.
I am a psychotherapist working with teens and families. I give this book to almost all of my parents at our first session. I often hear back that after reading the first few pages, they felt a huge sense of relief. I highly recommend this book for every parent!
This book was helpful in learning how to effectively build a good relationship and get cooperation from my teenage son. If you’re child is strong willed I recommend this book for you. It is full of organized explanations, exercises, tips and habits to get you to were you need to be with your teen. I’m so proud of the high functioning and peaceful relationship I’ve built with my incredibly capable son thanks to this book.
This book leaves you with the unrealistic idea that if parents would just be respectful and willing to talk out/negotiate every little thing with their teen, everything will be fine. "Move over to the co-pilot's seat so you can have a positive influence on your teens without trying to run their lives." There's nothing in here about discipline.
I didn’t really get this book. There’s no advice and no ideas on how to discipline in any way. Why is it called positive discipline? If you’re looking for a book to tell you what you’re doing wrong (yelling, not listening, reacting too quickly or without all the information) then this may be helpful. If you are looking for ways to help with what you’re doing wrong, this is not the book for you.
I am very grateful to have found this book. I also took on the online parent class and I really love this approach coming from the heart and having faith teenage years will be much better, growing together with my kids for becoming well rounded adults that make right choices for their life and live from their hearts.
Great read for parents- it is important that both parents read it and align / agree on it. Really strong help to improve the quality of parents & teens relationships
The first part was quite good, and there was some useful information about helping the teen recognize their emotions, a table of personality types at the end (which probably should have been way in the beginning), and a few other parts I found helpful. I liked the reminders that your relationship with your child is precious and the most important thing.
Having said that - it's also important to try to help your teen make good choices. I do not believe that letting them do whatever they want and just talking about things is the best (or a safe) approach in every situation for every child.
The section on scary behavior was spectacularly unhelpful. Telling me not to worry so much is not really going to keep my kid from getting pregnant or get an STD or get rolling drunk and accidentally kill herself. I have one daughter who is clearly at risk for all these things, and she's the reason I read this book. I don't think I got a lot of help with her problems.
I did actually apply the principles in the book and the scary behavior quickly escalated. Some kids do need a lot of guidance and sometimes freedom has to be scaled back if it's apparent that the kid cannot manage things well - whether the child likes it or not.
More information on teen brain development and the stages we can expect to see would have been helpful too.
There were parts of this book I didn't relate to very well--it could be a little over-the-top with the psychobabble, spent a lot of time trying to convince me that I had childhood "issues" I had to deal with first (If I'm going to wait to parent until I have all *my* childhood issues taken care of, I may as well have given up before I started) and there were some pretty, um, OK incredibly lenient examples in the book. (Fifteen-year-old-girl --"Hey, mom, I know how much you worry, so I'm going to tell you--I'm going out to an all-night rave party. I don't intend to have sex with anyone, though" Mom--"Ok, dear, thanks for telling me" ) ???????? Yikes. However, there were some very good chapters on respecting our children, tips on "co-piloting", and an excellent chapter on follow-through that make the book valuable enough a read to merit some stars.
Like all parenting books, this one has to be read with a large grain of salt. But it has enough wisdom in it to make it worth the read. I know it has helped me remember that with teens, sometimes you just have to let them have the snit.... I also think that the advice to be kind is well worth it, because it is way too easy to forget just how sensitive these kids still are. I also appreciate the being "firm" part, as it helps me when I hate saying "no" to remember that it is really helping them when I stand firm on some things.
This approach to parenting is a complete paradigm shift for me. I appreciate Rachel sharing information about this author. I grew up with controlling parents and know first hand just how well that works out - you'd think I wouldn't repeat it, but then it's all I've known. This book makes sense and I know it will be hard to implement, but I think Rachel is right. This is how we should parent.
I was surprised at how much I enjoyed this book. I knew that the ideas would be great. Jane Nelson and Lynn Lott always have great tools and suggestions. But this book was so much heavier on the "whys" than the other books in the PD sereies that I really got a lot more out of it. I will definitely be revisiting this book in the years to come.
I'm very intrigued by the parenting ideas in this book but am unsure of how they will translate into an older child adoption. The book assumes that the parent has already raised their child for 13 years. We're adopting an 11 year old and will be starting from scratch. Will some of these ideas work with her as well? It will be interesting to see what happens.
Very interesting book. It helped me adjust my perspective on parenting teenagers. At first the book seemed too "easy" on obnoxious behavior, but I've been amazed how the calm approach really does work better than the controlling approach!
This was the first respectful book I've read on parenting teens. The author believes in the fundamental dignity of children, adolescents and adults, and gives useful advice, placing responsibility for the relationship where it belongs-- with parents.
Good but mostly aimed at families where the children aren't TOO troubled. Not totally realistic for me but still worth reading with some good suggestions.