When I do workshops for parents of teenagers I see many shaking heads when I say, “it is a tough time to be a teenager!” Everyone in the audience recognizes this statement as fact. Few adults can picture growing up as a teen now. School demands are higher. It is harder to get into college. College costs add a burden. A high school diploma doesn’t help your career very much. And now, with the economic crisis, the future looks tougher still. There is only one thing tougher than being a teenager, and that is being a parent of one!
Teens are exposed to so much so early that they seem to be growing up too fast. The media’s influence on our teens has never been greater. Movies and TV shows push our teens to be older than they are. We know the risks that they may encounter but it seems that they do not. We worry for them. And the freedoms that they demand from us so early make it difficult for us to stay in control. How are we to parent our teens today? Where else can we turn?
We need to give our kids freedom but it should be a chaperoned freedom. We, the parents do much of the chaperoning. There is no way around conceding control to other chaperones in the care of our teens. Teachers, coaches, dance instructors, and other parent surrogates take on our roles as leaders for our children. This is obvious but when put in this context it sounds scary. As parents, we don’t want to give up this role to others. Yet, it is not only part of the natural process of separation but important for our kids to be influenced by outside forces. How could this be?
Our teens go through a period of questioning everything you, their parents, stand for. They learned your values and your rules for more than twelve years. Teen years is a time for questioning and, yes, experimentation. Teens try things on for themselves and don’t necessarily do this with parental consent! Here is where outside influences come in.
Many years ago there was a study that showed that teens that succeeded were often inspired by an “influential adult”. This was an adult outside the teen’s family that helped to inspire that teen to achieve something because of the relationship he or she had with that teen. That adult often saw a skill or a talent in that teen that just needed a little push. That influential adult could be a history teacher, a baseball coach, or a ballet instructor. This influence helps build a foundation of ego and confidence in that teenager. It is incredibly powerful for a teen to be recognized by someone other than a biased parent. No matter what skill was inspired or what adult inspired it, the fact that the teen was influenced well by someone outside the family is the point. It takes some swallowing of pride for parents to accept this but it is necessary to realize that it very well may take a village to raise your teen. Sometimes effective parenting is finding the right supports for your children.
In a recent meeting at Sandra Marie’s School of Ballet, I stated that the school was an important influence on our young girls and the young men who are lucky enough to belong to this supportive group of teachers. If you think about the negative influences our kids face, it is scary. Think about our kids who dance and what their young lives would have been like if they did not have an avenue to pursue their joy of dance in such a supportive environment. I have seen many young girls over our eleven years at the studio grow to be mature and secure young women. Sandra Marie’s leadership had an influence in developing these young people. This is a fact that can’t be denied. Now, the studio wants to support parents even further. They are sponsoring a parenting workshop for parents of teenagers.
The workshop is “You Can’t Fix Them So How Can You Live With Them- Parenting teens today”. This is a workshop I have been giving across the North Shore for many years. I hope you can join us on ____________________ at ___________________. The workshop will also serve as a fundraiser for Northeast Youth Ballet. NYB is a nonprofit organization dedicated to bringing quality ballet to our youth.