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A little secret for dealing with teens

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♀♥Lady Urania♥♀
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« on: November 30, 2008, 01:55:35 am »

Ive begun reading this book, and I think I like it is because the author is not some psychologist, or like says per this description of her plight - some writer that gives advice to parents about teens but isnt a parent or ever had kids. IOW unrelatable. Jenny Hernandez is a mom with seven kids who had to deal with a tough hand, and her kids are now doing very well. This is a bit about her and her book, A Little Secret for Dealing With Teens.

http://www.enotalone.com/article/4174.html


A Little Secret for Dealing With Teens

by Jennie Hernandez Hanks

A few years ago, Jennie Hernandez-Hanks found herself as a single Hispanic mother of seven-three teenagers, two preschoolers-receiving no financial support, on welfare and with no higher education or job skills. Her children had been out of school for two years when she decided to move to another state and go back to school herself in order to learn a trade that would allow her to support her family and get her life back together.

Stretched to the limit emotionally, physically and financially, Hanks saw her older children heading down roads that would make all their lives worse. Desperate to keep them from slipping away from her, as happens with so many disadvantaged, at-risk youths, she developed a process to turn their lives around. Today, her children are thriving. Her older children have been named National Merit Scholars and are being recruited by Ivy League schools. Her oldest son received a full scholarship to Princeton University. Her home is more peaceful and her children are learning to be responsible members of the family. Most important, they believe in themselves and they are happy.

In this concise, illustrated book, parents will learn Hanks's secret-a new way of parenting teens-that can change the momentum in the household from one of secrecy, rebellion and confrontation to open communication, understanding and mutual respect. The book shows how to employ an exchange-based approach to improve the parent/teen relationship. Using example dialogues and parent/teen success stories, the book teaches how to initiate exchanges, establish guidelines for communicating, monitor communication and make changes as necessary.

A Little Secret for Dealing with Teens is a must-read for any parent, teacher, counselor or others involved with children.

I've Been There!

My older children became teenagers (with still more teenagers coming) during a very difficult time. My marriage was dissolving. The children were not doing well in school; for a couple of years, they weren't even attending. My husband had limited work, and we had no money. Daily, things grew worse.

Eventually my husband and I separated, and the load was totally on me to make things work. Soon I had to deal with things such as no heat in the house because I didn't have the money to buy fuel. I gathered wood scraps from a construction site and burned them in the fireplace to warm the house. Our landlady was trying to evict us even though our rent was paid. Now that there was no “man” around the house to fix things up for free, it seemed she wanted someone else to live there. My children were not dealing well with the chaos which was everywhere in their lives. Looking back, I have no idea how we made it through it all, but we did.

When I finally gained a divorce, with sole custody of seven children, we all relocated to a different state where we could get a brand-new start. I was a single mother with seven children, three of them teenagers, two of them preschoolers. Our family savings was the change we found under the sofa cushions. With no income or child support, I had to rely on government welfare to provide the basic necessities for my family. Since I had no marketable job skills, I enrolled in college as a full-time student. This was very difficult, since I had to put my younger children in daycare-something I had never done before. All this change and disruption was very confusing for my children. They weren't happy, especially my teenagers who had become angry and resentful. I could see in their eyes how they felt: “This is all your fault, Mom, that we're in this mess!”

At this point, something snapped inside me. I realized that I did not want my kids' lives to suffer because of some of my past choices. In fact, I wanted to help them have lives that were better than mine. I wanted to empower them. I needed to find a way to accomplish this.

Stretched to the Limit and Beyond

I had been a stay-at-home mom and out of the workplace for years. My physical, financial and emotional resources were stretched to the limit. I had no choice but to go back to school full time, even though I knew that the demands on my time and energy would be enormous. In addition to commuting to classes and doing schoolwork, I did all the household and parenting tasks. Whenever anything in the house broke, I was the one who fixed it. Whenever the kids had to go somewhere, I was the one who took them. The entire responsibility for raising seven children was mine alone.

My teenagers especially needed more and more of my attention. All their problems, demands, concerns and self-absorptions were directed at me. They had a lot of anger because our family was apart and we were moving again. I had policemen at my door because my son was messing around with some of his friends. I couldn't keep a handle on everything by doing things the way I had in the past. My older kids were headed down a road that needed to be changed. We had problems and I needed solutions-yesterday.

I began by turning to the “experts.” What I soon learned was that the “experts” usually gave complicated, long-winded instructions on how to raise teenagers. But surprisingly, many had no firsthand experience with teens. One self-proclaimed expert I saw on a talk show had all the proper credentials, yet he hadn't been married or had kids. He had some good ideas, but I couldn't even begin to relate to him. This seemed crazy to me, but the demands of my situation made me press on for solutions. When I read books promising answers, it often seemed that they never really got to the point. I remember one book in particular (one of the better ones, actually) that went through a twelve-step process on cooperative problem-solving with your teenagers, with page after page of technical explanations. Not very helpful. I didn't have the time or patience to read through it all and to try to apply it. I believed there had to be a better way, one that a busy, pressured parent like myself could use.

Mother Invention

I've heard that necessity is the mother of invention. I had a very real, urgent need for an effective and easy way to deal with my teenagers and help their lives (and mine) work better. I filled that need by developing an approach of my own. It's a simple, straightforward one that works with my own children, and works very well.

Today my children are thriving. My two older ones are members of the National Honor Society and Who's Who Among High School Students, and they both received scholarships to the National Young Leaders Conference in Washington, D.C. My oldest son recently finished a term working as a page in the Idaho State Legislature and is now attending Princeton University on a full four-year scholarship. My oldest daughter graduated with high honors and was a speaker at her graduation. She also was selected to attend Girls' State, a week-long program at the State Capitol in which select girls, chosen to represent all parts of the state, learn about the legislative process. Last year she was first runner-up in the county Junior Miss Pageant and received scholarships in four categories. My younger children are now working toward similar achievements. But most importantly, our home is more peaceful and my children are learning to be responsible members of the family. What's really incredible is that they are nice people (even as teenagers!), and they are happy.

People have asked me what I did to make our family life successful. The following pages explain the process I used, which I have developed into a seminar that I give today to other parents of teens. In a way, my approach is from a “manager's” point-of-view, where getting things to work well is the driving force. This approach is based on five concepts that define our relationships with our teenagers:

• All relationships are exchanges.
• Exchanges are run by rules.
• Some rules governing exchanges are hidden.
• Put all the rules on the table.
• Focus on getting exchanges to work.

As you use this five-part approach, you will see your teenagers assume responsibility for their lives. They will use their creative energy in positive ways to establish relationships that work for them, particularly their relationship with you. You may not believe it yet, but you will see less contention in your home. Your children will exercise better judgment. They will mature gracefully and be ready for the world when it is time to leave home. Your life as a parent will be more pleasant.

Please Remember, I'm Just a Mom

Just so you know, I'm not a psychologist, therapist or child counselor. I'm a mom. Yet many of the concepts in this book are colored by my training and interest in human resource development from a business standpoint. As I took classes on these subjects, I began applying the same principles to my family life. I found business management to be a better resource than all the child development materials I studied. In business, the bottom line is getting things done efficiently and effectively. Business is biased towards results and performance-and not necessarily concerned with the “why” of things. I didn't have the time or resources to give in to the many demands of my children, nor did I want to just leave them to their own devices. I was alone and gone most of the time. Getting my family up and running was my primary motive. To be blunt, getting through each day without a disaster was often all I wanted to accomplish. But, something miraculous happened along the way. By following this management-like path, our family slowly changed. Today, we are happier, healthier, more purposeful people. There is a delightful quality in our home, and my teenagers are all doing great.

Throughout this book, I use stories to illustrate my concepts for dealing with teenagers. Many of these stories are experiences from my personal life and the lives of others I know.* Hopefully you can relate to them and use them as reference points in your own parenting adventures. As you read and apply these concepts, please use them in a way that will uniquely benefit you and your family. The choices I used for my children may not be the same ones you want for yours.

For example, one parent came up to me after I taught a seminar and said she liked the class but didn't agree with what I wanted from my children. I was sorry that I hadn't made it clear to her that I didn't want to impose my agenda as a parent on anyone. Likewise, the intention of this book is to give you valuable parenting tools, not showcase my ideas of what good parenting is. How you use these tools is entirely up to you and will depend on what you want for yourself and your teenagers.

© 2000 Health Communications, Inc.

About the Author

Jennie Hernandez Hanks is the mother of seven children, four of them teen-agers, who developed her approach to highly effective parenting when her own relationship with her children reached a crisis point. Her technique has been so successful that she now helps other parents turn their home lives around through her parenting workshops and seminars.
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« Reply #1 on: November 30, 2008, 02:06:55 am »

• All relationships are exchanges.
• Exchanges are run by rules.
• Some rules governing exchanges are hidden.
• Put all the rules on the table.
• Focus on getting exchanges to work.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ive found pretty much the above is true. Like tonight, ill give an example since some know ive had a tough time with my fourteen year old son. I told him, as my daughter was cooking some things (shes good at cooking and wanted to make some food), as she took that task I told him, put away clean dishes, then do the catbox. I would be washing dishes in the sink.

Of course, what does he do? Try to get out of work. "All relationships are exchanges," is just the way it goes. As he said "Im hungry, I want to eat first," I said, "Dinner is not ready, AND if you want to EAT, you will put away the clean dishes and do the catbox." My son can have a mouth, he put away the dishes, then didnt want to do the catbox. I reminded him about eating. Then he got mouthy and said "I dont want to clean a catbox for a nagging woman."  Shocked . I said "Okay then, you can clean a catbox for a woman who beats your ass which do you want?" He ran into the bathroom with little baggie to clean the catbox,  Evil . That may sound harsh, but its about discipline, and yes, its about exchange. And you got to teach kids respect, esp when they're getting bigger and taller than you. I let my son know, no matter how big he gets, or thinks hes bad-ass, I will always be able to, whip his ass. As moms, we have to let them know it - or else they'll run us over. 

'You want to eat - get your chores done. If I assign a chore, its yours, dont want to hear 'why it isnt fair,' and all that. Ive assigned it. You want priviledges to go over friends houses? You better have good grades. You wanna go on myspace today? Did you go to school or ditch it?" LOL But Ive found that, its not about all priviledges either. Its not. I can omit all priviledges and he can still be stubborn. But when basics come down like having a hairstyle he wants, long or short, or certain style of clothing. I only by law have to provide clothing - doesnt designate what type of clothing. Cool shirts with skulls and South Pole and Hurley dont have to be in the wardrobe, or name brand shoes. So when he says 'I would like this,' Its an opportunity for an exchange deal. "What are you going to do for me?" but with the aim of getting the better to be brought out of him. better grades, taking care of chores, being responsible.

One of the main things though is you have to teach kids, ultimately while love is free and everflowing, having 'something for nothing' is not the way of the world. You have to work for what you have. You dont get something for nothing. A place to live, car to drive, food to eat, nothing will be free in the world, and still be able to have whatever **** attitude and expect to get something. So if parents allow their kids to manipulate them, out of getting 'something for nothing,' then when they hit the real world, and find this formula doesnt lead to success, its going to be an issue. The law of exchange - thus applies. Its not about greed or 'getting stuff,' but it is about teaching them, no something for nothing. In addition, as parents, esp us single parents, can be tapped at times for energy and have to stretch our resources, finanically, energetically, et al, we have to learn to get the most out of our kids, and not allow them to tap us for all of our energy, stress us (cause they can) and push us as far as they can. Cause the older they get - and I warn for those who may have little kids now - once they hit those teen years, overnight they're different people and it will hit you upside the head if you let them get away with too much and you create a monster.

So reading the book and so far so good - shes right on exchange. Shes right.
« Last Edit: November 30, 2008, 02:09:23 am by ♀♥Lady Urania♥♀ » Report Spam   Logged

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« Reply #2 on: November 30, 2008, 03:14:58 am »

This is from her book, and this is what probably 100% of teenagers would ‘want’ to have, and only an insane parent would give them their way, without an exchange.

One Teenager’s Expectations

Paul, my then seventeen-year old son, began to complain about needing nicer clothes and more access to the family car. He became really upset with me and what he saw as my neglect. He sent me subtle messages. A word here and a comment there. And then there is that look. I began to fall into the trap of feeling guilty, especially since I was either gone from the house or busy most of the time. At first I felt I should comply with my son’s demands.

After all the not-so-subtle hints, Paul and I sat down together to discuss the matter of my neglect. I suggested that we make a list of the expectations we had of each other. I wrote the list, which went something like this. He wanted me to furnish him with a room of his own restricted access by other family members. He wanted free access to the family car--fully fueled, repaired and always clean. He wanted me to pay the auto insurance, which was dramatically more expensive because he was driving my car in the first place. He also wanted free access to my computer, including the internet connection. He expected me to buy his clothes, but of course only the clothes he approved of (His shoes needed to be a certain brand and style, including special shoes for each of the sports he played). I was expected to do all of his laundry including, those times he needed that special T-shirt washed, and I had to food shop, cook and serve him all of his meals.

Pointing to the list, I asked him, “What do I get in exchange for all this?” I saw shock covering his face. He was speechless. I continued. “So I guess what you’re saying to me is that I’m supposed to give all this to you in exchange for which you bless me with your presence in our home.”

“Well, y…y…yeah!” He stammered, wide-eyed and innocent.

“Would you like to be on the other end of an exchange like this one?” I asked.

First he looked at me, then he stared into space. He could see I wasn’t gong to go on until he responded. Finally he admitted, “Well, no, I wouldn’t.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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« Reply #3 on: November 30, 2008, 03:39:39 am »

This is from her book, and this is what probably 100% of teenagers would ‘want’ to have, and only an insane parent would give them their way, without an exchange.

One Teenager’s Expectations

Paul, my then seventeen-year old son, began to complain about needing nicer clothes and more access to the family car. He became really upset with me and what he saw as my neglect. He sent me subtle messages. A word here and a comment there. And then there is that look. I began to fall into the trap of feeling guilty, especially since I was either gone from the house or busy most of the time. At first I felt I should comply with my son’s demands.

After all the not-so-subtle hints, Paul and I sat down together to discuss the matter of my neglect. I suggested that we make a list of the expectations we had of each other. I wrote the list, which went something like this. He wanted me to furnish him with a room of his own restricted access by other family members. He wanted free access to the family car--fully fueled, repaired and always clean. He wanted me to pay the auto insurance, which was dramatically more expensive because he was driving my car in the first place. He also wanted free access to my computer, including the internet connection. He expected me to buy his clothes, but of course only the clothes he approved of (His shoes needed to be a certain brand and style, including special shoes for each of the sports he played). I was expected to do all of his laundry including, those times he needed that special T-shirt washed, and I had to food shop, cook and serve him all of his meals.

Pointing to the list, I asked him, “What do I get in exchange for all this?” I saw shock covering his face. He was speechless. I continued. “So I guess what you’re saying to me is that I’m supposed to give all this to you in exchange for which you bless me with your presence in our home.”

“Well, y…y…yeah!” He stammered, wide-eyed and innocent.

“Would you like to be on the other end of an exchange like this one?” I asked.

First he looked at me, then he stared into space. He could see I wasn’t gong to go on until he responded. Finally he admitted, “Well, no, I wouldn’t.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~




LOL an excellent example of teenage expectations!!  My son was rather 'creative' in his 'exchange', when realizing that 'being my son' and 'gracing me with his presence' was not quite the exchange I had in mind! In return for all of the above, he said he would look after me when I was old and decrepit and not stick me in an old-age home! He thought that was a rather fair exchange!  Shocked Wink
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« Reply #4 on: November 30, 2008, 03:55:43 am »

LOL an excellent example of teenage expectations!!  My son was rather 'creative' in his 'exchange', when realizing that 'being my son' and 'gracing me with his presence' was not quite the exchange I had in mind! In return for all of the above, he said he would look after me when I was old and decrepit and not stick me in an old-age home! He thought that was a rather fair exchange!  Shocked Wink

LMAO! Thats so sweet of him haha! At least you got that for an exchange 'promise' (which of course we could drop and not require a special 'home' oneday lol). Im tellin ya, that quote by Will Smith applies in my house, and its important to remind them cause teenagers are not on the same planet for real, like he said "This is not your room, it is on loan while you live here." LOL But its crazy how kids will think they're entitled to things like, oh that expensive X-Box and all games should be provided for. They should be able to have 'their own tv in their room' Or have their friends over when they want 'just cause.' What is in it for me, to have a bunch of loud ass teenage boys in my house keeping me up all night? Oh, the phone - ringing all day long - where is that included in the expectation when I pay the phone bill?

My son is funny, he tried to toss me a line. A friend gave him a cell phone, just the phone, no service of course on it. "Mom, If you pay for a plan for me, i can get free unlimited text messaging so its free." Uh logic kimosabe? How is it 'free' if I pay for a plan? "Oh, ill pay for it though. "Uh, how is it you can pay me for it, if you're not old enough to work a job and I assume the plan? so you can get unlimited text messages? Free for you not me. Unlimited text messaging on a plan you pay for month doesnt equal free."

Yes, they're funny, how they try to scam you like that. "Oh... ill pay but you pay the plan, no I cant get a job but... uh.... duh... when i can get a job. duh.... uh...." Sure! LOL
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What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly.  ~Richard Bach
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