Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Parent irritated by teenage son

-

Hi Carolyn: I have two children who are both fundamenta­lly good kids. BUT one is a very, very cute 10-year-old daughter and the other is a very, very annoying 14-year-old son. One is cuddly and sweet and funny. The other is only rarely cuddly or sweet, funny but snarky (mostly about me) and seems to adore one thing: contradict­ing every statement I make. You can probably see where I’m going with this. I KNOW this is normal teenage behavior, I KNOW my sweet 10year-old will become an annoying 14year-old, too. But right now, I feel lots of affection for her and only annoyance and irritation toward him.

And then I feel guilty. Because I think he can sense the difference, however much I try to hide it, which I’m sure worsens his behavior. What can I do to feel more affection toward my teen? Or even less annoyance?

Annoyed: You’ve actually done this a few times before, with both children: Adjust your parenting style to match your kid’s changing needs. You don’t make airplane noises anymore to make eating fun for them, and this change is no different.

The teenage adjustment feels different because it’s the first time your kid isn’t grabbing for your attention. It’s easy to take personally – but, don’t. It was your job to build his skills and confidence, and now it’s his job to test out the idea of navigating the world without you. As you know – and as you’ve sensed in sensing the difference – he still wants and needs you around, and wants your approval. The easiest path to giving him the approval and presence he wants – without getting up in his grill – is to look for and appreciate the person he is growing into. The surly stuff isn’t everything. There’s an interestin­g person developing in there. The cute-caterpilla­r stage was always going to be temporary. Make it your mission right now to be the person who sees the first vague outlines of the butterfly, and delights in them. Readers’ thoughts:

I have two 14-year-old grandsons. I can so often see glimmers of the tender hearts hidden under those crusty exteriors. I’m sure it’s much easier for Grandma, but I’m always trying not to bruise that tenderness – the world does that enough.

Teens want to be seen as adults. Are there ways you can give him independen­ce and respect? Ask him to teach you something? Have him take over ordering groceries and making breakfast and lunch? Harness his desire to be independen­t and praise him when he is.

My 12-year-old is smelly and doubles down on stuff he is objectivel­y wrong about. He’s also a really interestin­g under all the hair and tweeny angst, and he’s as tired of being told what to do as I am of telling. A long ride or hike breaks the dynamic for a bit.

Been there. Survived. One action I took: I hugged him every day. Whether I wanted to or not.

[Great. Ask first, though – “May I give you a hug?” CH]

I recently saw a social media post that said “You think you’ve got it bad? Some people are 15.” He has to survive being a teenager. Please be kind as you survive him surviving this.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States