Twelve-year-old girls are the smartest people I know.
If you don't believe me, just ask them. They value what a 15 or
16-year-old person says, but let's face it, if you are 20, you are old
and out of it. A 30 year old is a dinosaur and if you're 40 or 50,
forget it. Twelve-
year-olds know how to dress, how to wear their makeup and how to style
their hair. Many of them help mom dress, and appear in public. Woe to
the days she comes to pick them up without consulting first on what she
should wear. Due to their knowledge at this age, one would think raising
them would be easy, but this isn't the case. In fact, this knowingness
they exude is quite shallow, and 13 is when they usually realize that
what they knew or felt at 12 was not only childish, but was wrong. For
mom that means 13 may be a lot worse than 12.
Raising
daughters is tough, and raising sons may seem a lot easier due to their
more easy-going emotional status, but appearance is not everything, and
boys struggle, too. Parents need support from other parents, they need
guidance from pediatricians and teachers, but mostly they need one
another to help add balance and discipline to their child's home life.
Kids have manipulated mom against dad and dad against mom for
generations. But when you are a single parent, your own guilt about not
being able to do it all can be a source of manipulation your child will
use with the skill of a professional con artist. The key is to be honest
with who you are, what you are, and forgive and deal with that
appropriately. Sometimes as an effort for parents to feel close to their
kids, they tell them too much of what has happened in their life with
previous relationships and/or their other parent. This can be a mistake
of the worse kind. Kids will and do manipulate with any guilt they sense
in their parents. |
As a child ages, and especially in the teen years, they continue to go
through stages of development. One of those stages means separating from
their parents. They do this by looking for differences between
themselves and their parents. They focus on morals, relationships, and
lifestyles. They point out to parents when they are being hypocritical
as well as when they are parenting incorrectly. They do this by
comparing their parents to their friends' parents, homes, and
lifestyles. This is normal, and you being pointed out as less is
somewhat normal too, as long as it's done infrequently and within
reason. We aren't perfect, but we do deserve our teen's respect.
However, when they continually make you out as the flawed parent,
person, or whatever, this is not respectful, and you will do your kids a
disservice if you don't step in and set appropriate boundaries. Being a
target for your 12 or 13 year old for disrespect, rudeness, or pushing
boundaries is not okay. At this age your kids need really strong
boundaries of what is acceptable and what is not. |
If
you are a parent of tweens or teens, and you feel out of control with
your child's attitude and disrespect, I have suggestions to help you get
things back on track NOW. Do not wait or procrastinate, saying they will grow out of it. Disrespect and attitude problems are ageless.
Think about this: 1.
Puberty changes not only a child's body, but the way they think. If
your family has a history of mental illness, talk to your child's
pediatrician so they can be alerted to possible changes that are not
part of a normal adolescent's thinking. |
2.
The younger you begin teaching manners the better. Trying to teach a 12
year old please and thank you are difficult. Positive reinforcement
when they are 2 for saying a simple thank you, please, and may I, will
go a long way when they are 12. Kids learn best when parents and others
around them are saying these polite things as well. |
3.
It is important you know your child's friends, both real and virtual.
Social media has kept us more connected to our kids, but unfortunately
it has also left us more in the dark in regards to who our children hang
out with and converse with. Parents who don't monitor their child's
virtual life run a greater risk of not knowing who is most influential
in their child's lives.
|
4.
Engage with your kids. This means listen to them, talk to them, do
things with them and hold them accountable. The teen years are the years
where you need to negotiate with your child in a way to help them learn
to be accountable, but never negotiate the structure or boundaries of
your family. If you have no boundaries or rules that you enforce with
consequences, your teen actually becomes more anxious and disrespectful.
|
5.
If your teen is ever involved with the law or arrested, do not jump in
to rescue them from this situation. Go to their side as a respectful,
loving parent, and be supportive, but do not blame the police or the
law. If your child does something wrong against society, it is important
they understand this is unacceptable, and no matter how much money, or
what color you are, the law is the law. Parents need to respect the law,
the teachers, and any other authority their child is going to encounter
within their teen years. Respect is learned in the home. |
As
I said in the beginning of this article, parenting a 12 year old is
tough. They are emotional, dramatic, egocentric and strong in their
beliefs. But, they are also watching, listening, and wanting a parent to
parent them. We cannot blame our kids for being disrespectful if we
allow it in our home. |
Mary Jo Rapini, MEd, LPC, is a licensed psychotherapist and co-author with Janine J. Sherman, of Start Talking: A Girl's Guide for You and Your Mom About Health, Sex or Whatever. Read more about the book at www.StartTalkingBook.com and more about Rapini at www.maryjorapini.com. |
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