The Borneo Post (Sabah)

How to teach teens about healthy relationsh­ips

- By Amy Joyce

PARENTS fret for years about having “the talk” with their kids. That talk, of course, being about sex. But one thing that is getting very lost in those conversati­ons is how to have a healthy romantic relationsh­ip. It’s not enough to have the sex talk, we have to have the love talk, too. Without it, we risk our kids being in abusive, manipulati­ve relationsh­ips, or missing out on a truly wonderful aspect of life.

According to a report released on Wednesday by Harvard Graduate School of Education’s Making Caring Common Project, parents worry a great deal about the hookup culture, but ignore the fact that young people are unprepared to learn how to love and develop caring, healthy romantic relationsh­ips.

“This whole area has been terribly neglected,” says Richard Weissbourd, a Harvard psychologi­st who runs the Making Caring Common project. Without conversati­ons about healthy relationsh­ips, parents are also neglecting to teach their children about misogyny and sexual harassment. “Adults seem not to be facing it squarely. It’s concerning,” Weissbourd adds.

If parents think kids don’t want to hear it from them, they should reconsider: 70 per cent of the 18to 25-year-olds who responded to the report’s survey said they wanted more informatio­n from parents about some emotional aspect of a romantic relationsh­ip. And 65 per cent said they wanted guidance about it in a sex ed or health class at school. But both parents and educators seem to focus on abstinence, how not to get pregnant or how to avoid a sexually transmitte­d disease. In doing so, parents are missing out on having important conversati­ons about how to love and be loved.

Here, Weissbourd and the report’s authors offer five ways to teach kids and young adults about healthy relationsh­ips: - Be a romantic philosophe­r Why? Young people and adults mean very different things when they say they’re in love. Because our understand­ings of love are vague and varied, young people may confuse love with infatuatio­n, lust, idolisatio­n or obsession. They may think, for example, that they are in love with someone because they can’t stop thinking about them. Or they may confuse love with the boost in self-esteem they experience when someone is romantical­ly interested in them.

Try this: Speak with your teen about the many forms of love. Explain what you mean when you say that you are in love with someone. Let your child understand that they may define being in love differentl­y than someone else and that there is no right definition of being in love. But there are ways of knowing whether intense feelings for someone else are likely to lead to healthy or unhealthy romantic relationsh­ips. Explore with your teen why and how love can be deeply meaningful and change the course of our lives.

Also: Ask your child how they think about different types of intense feelings toward someone. Talk about how people can be attracted to, or preoccupie­d with, other people for a range of positive and negative reasons, and discuss the importance of understand­ing why your teen might be attracted to someone else. Are they attracted to someone at least partly because they’re kind, generous and honest? Or are they attracted to someone because that person is elusive, seems unattainab­le or mistreats them in some way? Discussing these questions can give them tools for determinin­g whether a relationsh­ip is likely to be healthy or unhealthy.

- Talk about the markers of healthy and unhealthy relationsh­ips

Why? Teens may not know whether they’re in a healthy or unhealthy relationsh­ip. They also may be unsure if their worries, feelings of disappoint­ment or criticisms of their partner are normal. Try this: Examples of both healthy and unhealthy relationsh­ips are everywhere. Talk to your teen about couples you both know, and representa­tions of relationsh­ips in the media. Which are healthy? Which are harmful?

Why? If your teen is in a relationsh­ip, you might ask whether it makes them more or less self-respecting, hopeful, caring and generous. - Talk about the skills Why? Maintainin­g healthy relationsh­ips requires a range of skills, including the ability to communicat­e honestly and effectivel­y, to jointly solve problems, to measure anger and to be generous. Healthy relationsh­ips also benefit from being able to take someone else’s perspectiv­e in a deep way and to step back and view the relationsh­ip and its dynamics, strengths and challenges.

Try this: Discuss with your child various examples of caring, vibrant relationsh­ips. These examples might be relatives or friends who you think have mature romantic relationsh­ips, or could be couples portrayed in books, television, movies. You might watch with your teen the compelling marriages depicted in shows such as “This Is Us,” “Black-ish” and “Friday Night Lights.”

- Consider sharing lessons from your own relationsh­ips

Why? We can mine our experience­s for insights about mature and immature love, and why relationsh­ips do and don’t work. Teens are often interested in our experience­s, partly because they’re sorting out how they’re like or unlike us.

Try this: Think about what your relationsh­ips have taught you. What was healthy about them? Unhealthy? What attitudes or behaviours would you change if you could? Share with your teen any lessons you’ve learned about the skills, attitudes and sensitivit­ies that it takes to maintain a healthy romantic relationsh­ip.

 ??  ?? Seventy per cent of the 18- to 25-year-olds who responded to the survey said they wanted more informatio­n from parents about some emotional aspect of a romantic relationsh­ip.
Seventy per cent of the 18- to 25-year-olds who responded to the survey said they wanted more informatio­n from parents about some emotional aspect of a romantic relationsh­ip.

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