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Teenagers - Surviving Those Child Behavioral Problem Years.

As a parent, having a child reach the teenage years is joyful as well as a situation that brings with it new and interesting child discipline challenges. Your child has now completed childhood and made it to young adulthood. This breeds its own set of child discipline and child behavioral problems.

By Dr. Noel Swanson..

As a parent, having a child reach the teenage years is joyful as well as a situation that brings with it new and interesting child discipline challenges. Your child has now completed childhood and made it to young adulthood. This breeds its own set of child discipline and child behavioral problems.

Here area few tips to do it:

Adolescence is that time when they decide the type of adult they will ultimately become.  Suddenly your children are looking at you differently. And a child you’ve never had a child behavioral problem with, now doesn’t seem to do anything but the exact opposite of what they need to or are told too.

Another important fact to keep in mind while responding to your teenager’s behavior is that this phase is many times more difficult for the teenager than for you the parent. He is going through tremendous changes which leave most questions unanswered confounding the confusion further. He can barely cope with the physical changes when he has to deal with emotions so strong that they seem to burst through the seams. As an adult who has gone through this phase yourself, you can help your child to sail through this awkward time smoothly.

Let them know you don’t see them as a child any more. Many teenagers feel that their parents still view them as children. So they go out of their way to show how adult they are.

Make a few positive changes in the house. For instance, if children and adults eat separately during holidays, set a place for your teen at the adult table. And extend curfew, or include them in more adult conversations.

This way your child can feel that while he or she is not yet an adult, they are not being viewed as a child, either. This bit of parenting advice can head off child behavior and child discipline problems.

A good way of giving your child the perception that you treat him as an adult is to let your teenager have more decision making power. Let your teen make more child behavior decisions. Let them know you are available for guidance but that the decision is theirs to make. Taking decisions helps them take responsibility. For example, let your teen decide whether he wants to go on a school trip or not; and support his decision.

You can suggest to your teen to take up part time work if he finds time hanging on him or he needs extra money. However, make sure he doesn’t drop out of school because education will help him gain more financial freedom.

As a parent, it’s your responsibility to start stepping back and letting your child slowly sit on the driver’s seat. It helps them learn that the real world is probably a lot different than what was imagined as a child.

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