How much do teenagers tell their parents?
“I hardly share anything with my parents,” says 16-year-old Derek Kelley.
“I share very little with my parents,” says 18-year-old Tyler Wichelhaus.
And Jessie Donaghy gives an example of a question she hates: “How was your day?”
“When you’ve had a horrible day, you just feel like people at school are mad at you,” she says. ” Your classes went horribly, you failed a test. It can almost be an insult without them knowing it, because it just seems insensitive.”
Experts say parents have to ask specifics about a friend their child may be having trouble with, or a test at school that they were worried about.
“The specific questions, you’ll get more bang for your buck if you want them to communicate back to you than some general question that you could ask a stranger on the street,” says Dr. Meaux.
“Sometimes she’ll be like ‘so how is that situation going with this person’ and I’ll just burst out crying,” says Jessie.
Experts say it starts by being easy to talk to.
“You’re sort of the approachable parent, that you listen more than you talk, and listening is the hard thing,” says Dr. Meaux.
And once they truly believe you’re listening, experts say they’ll open up more.
“The more talking they’ll do because they’ll be open,” says Licensed Clinical Social Worker Freddie Wilson. “[They’ll be more open if they feel] you’re open to hearing what I’m saying rather than talking and giving them solutions and solving their problems for them. They want someone to hear them.”
And knowing when your child really needs your ear comes from getting to know your child.
“I’ll look at her and I’ll say ‘You look like you’re down, did something happen?’ Yea. Was it so and so? Yea,” explains Mrs. Donaghy.
“It helps to know that she cares and that she’s actually wanting to know about things,” says Jessie. |
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