| The next
example shows how you can prevent problems before they
arise. As you read, ask yourself these questions:
- Is the parent active in the child’s life?
- Are the limits involved realistic?
- Is the problem bigger than the parent can handle
alone?
- Should the parent seek outside help?
- How might you handle a similar
situation with your child?
Janice and Christopher (Age 14)2,5,6
What’s the Story?
Lately, Christopher has been
spending a lot of time in his bedroom with the door
closed. When Janice knocks on his door, he rarely answers
her; when she enters the room, he is lying on his bed
listening to his radio with his headphones on. “Can’t
you KNOCK?” he yells. When Janice asks him what
he’s listening to, he says “Nothing.”
Christopher has gotten four after-school detentions
in the last month, mostly for getting into fights and
arguments. Janice knows that Christopher shouts at her
and at his younger sister more often than he used to,
but she’s not sure why he’s so angry or
how to help him.
Janice Says:
He’s always kept to himself, but I’ve never
seen him like this. The littlest thing can make him
explode. It doesn’t make sense. His grades are
fine; he does his chores; he dresses the same. He’s
just so angry. What if he hits someone? What if his
yelling changes into punching? What can I do? I’m
really worried about him.
Christopher Says: I
wish she would lay off! She’s always asking stupid
questions, like “What are you listening to?”
or “What’s wrong with you?” She probably
thinks I’m doing drugs or that I worship the devil
or something. Nothing is wrong with me. I just want
to be left alone.
What’s the Point? Christopher
may be trying to keep his mother out of his life, or
he might just want time by himself to think. In his
mind, there’s no point in answering her questions
because she couldn’t possibly know what he is
going through, thinking, or feeling. Many kids Christopher’s
age feel this way and go to extremes to prevent their
parents from knowing anything about them. After a while,
many parents stop trying to know their kids because
their feelings get so hurt when their kids reject them.
Sadly, both the parents and the kids end up feeling
very alone.
While Christopher may keep pushing
her away, Janice needs to let him know she cares about
him. She can’t make him talk to her; she can’t
force him to be her friend. But she can show Christopher
that she loves him, she is interested in him, and he
isn’t going away no matter how mean he is to her.
By not forcing the issue, she also shows him that she
respects his privacy.
Janice should also seek out new and
different ways to spend time with Christopher. Being
involved in the same project or going somewhere “cool”
together is a more natural way to reconnect and redefine
their roles with one another. It also allows their relationship
to accommodate the new, young-adult Christopher and
his interests as things continue to change.
Janice needs to let Christopher know
what is acceptable and what is not, when it comes to
how he treats her and his younger sister. Janice should
make it clear that he must treat her with respect and
speak to her and his sister without raising his voice.
Christopher may try to isolate himself even more as
he gets older, so this issue is worth the struggle because
it sets a minimum level of contact for family and son
at this stage of their lives. Janice accepts that Christopher
doesn’t want to share his life with her, but she
will not accept him being disrespectful to her or her
daughter.Of greater concern is Christopher’s level
of anger and how he deals with it. His yelling and fighting
is a new thing that may be a sign of trouble. Anger
is a tough emotion for many kids to handle because our
culture frowns on expressing anger. Most of the contact
kids and adults have with anger is seeing it expressed
in its most extreme form: violence. Sadly, violence
s the only way that many people know to deal with their
anger.
Janice may want to enlist some
outside help to teach Christopher how to deal with his
anger in a more positive way. Many community centers,
health care professionals, school counselors, and teen
groups teach classes on how to manage anger. They show
people how to control anger and how to express it without
hurting themselves or others. Another option for Janice
is to get Christopher involved in a healthy outlet for
his anger. Running, boxing, writing in a journal, playing
the drums, even crying are ways to channel anger so
it’s more constructive than destructive. Having
an outlet for anger and other emotions keeps them from
building up inside, which also prevents them from bursting
out in harmful or violent ways. |