Positive Parenting: Navigating Your Teen’s Newfound Independence
Newfound teen independence can feel like a roller coaster – for both you and your child.
Of course, we want our children to grow up to be self-reliant and capable, but sometimes it’s hard to watch independent teens find their way. Especially once they achieve the freedom of having a driver’s license.
It’s appropriate for teens to want to spend more time with their peers than their parents as they get older. Part of our positive parenting and gentle discipline is raising kids to become independent, and that means they need to test their wings by moving out into the wider world.
If we’ve accepted our child’s dependency needs AND affirmed her development into her own separate person, she’ll stay fiercely connected to us even as her focus shifts to peers, high school and the passions that make her soul sing.
Staying Connected with Independent Teens
It’s critical, during the teen years, for parents to remain their children’s emotional and moral compass. You’ve been your child’s source of encouragement and wisdom her whole life, there’s no reason to take a back seat during these important developmental years. During the teen independence stages, kids will begin to experiment with intimate relationships outside the family, but to do that successfully, they need to be able to rely on those intimate relationships at home remaining solid.
We need to invite our children to rely on us emotionally until they’re emotionally ready to depend on themselves. Too often, in our culture, we let teenagers transfer their dependency outside the family, with disastrous results.
Teens often give up a great deal of themselves in pursuit of the closeness they crave, only to crash against the hard reality that other teens aren’t developmentally able to function as a substitute family.
It is NOT a sign of healthy emotional development for an independent teen to push parents away, or for parents to let him. That’s a sign of a damaged relationship.
Attempting to parent when your relationship with your child is damaged is like pushing a boulder uphill.
It’s never too late in your relationship with your child to do repair work, to move closer, or to adopt positive parenting skills. But it’s a whole lot harder to build the strong connection you want if the foundation isn’t there.
Teen Independency: Understanding Your Teen’s Developing Brain
Without understanding your teen’s inner life, it’s hard to understand his choices. I’m not saying that even with more connection you’ll like his choices, or that you’d make the same ones. That’s one of the benefits of being an adult — hopefully, you have better judgment than your teen!
His frontal cortex is still developing into his twenties, so he’s still building his impulse control and the ability to foresee the consequences of his actions.
Good judgment, after all, develops from experience combined with reflection. Life will provide your independent teen with experience. Your job is to make sure he has the opportunity to reflect on his experience. But you can’t do that by rubbing his nose in his bad decisions. You have to ask good questions and let him come to his own conclusions.
So start slow, with connection. Find ways to be with your teen daily, and longer times on weekends. Listen more than you talk.
Seek First to Understand Teenage Independence
As Stephen Covey says, “Seek first to understand.” Over time, your connection with your teen will deepen, even while she’s spending lots of time with her friends and activities.
In fact, don’t be surprised if she plops down on your bed some night just when you’re about to turn out the light to sleep, and wants to talk about what’s going on in her life. I know, you need your sleep — but what a vote of confidence from a teen!
Every teen needs at least one relationship like that as she journeys toward independence.