Relationships between parents and teenagers are not always easy, acknowledges Maurice Elias, who enjoys talking to his daughter, Samara (far left) and her high school friends.
Photo by Nick Romanenko
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Just when you think that you have all the answers to raising your children, they become teenagers, complete with raging hormones, peer pressures and identity crises, to name a few afflictions of
the pubescent ilk.
A new book by Rutgers psychologist Maurice Elias and school psychologists
Steven Tobias and Brian Friedlander may help mothers and fathers contend with
what they consider the toughest parenting job of all -- raising teenagers.
"Raising Emotionally Intelligent Teenagers: Parenting with Love, Laughter, and
Limits" (Harmony Books), published this fall, provides strategies for dealing with
adolescents by applying and extending the insights of Daniel Goleman's best
seller "Emotional Intelligence."
And like Elias' earlier book, "Emotionally Intelligent Parenting," which deals
with youngsters, the new volume combines practical advice and real-life
scenarios. The material, recounted with warmth and humor, is drawn mainly from
the authors' professional practices and personal experiences.
"Both Dan Goleman's book and ours have found their way into numerous
international editions," notes Elias, professor of psychology at the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences-New Brunswick, "bespeaking what seems to be a universal
recognition that human behavior and relationships must be informed by both the
head and the heart."
Elias says parents of teens wonder if it's too late to do something about their
young adults' emotional development. "But the science of emotional
development doesn't have a point of closure in adolescence. In fact, it's not too
late," Elias asserted in a recent interview.
The book calls the teen stage a process, not an end product or even a stop
along the highway of life. And parents' job is to make sure their teenagers reach
the real goal of being an emotionally intelligent adult.
"Adolescence is for learning how to become an adult, not for learning how to
become a successful adolescent," the authors believe.
The authors point out that the turn of the millennium is a very demanding time
to be a parent of a teenager and that the only thing more difficult is being a
teenager. The parent-child relationship, they say, has been altered by the fact
that more information than ever before -- from peers, the media and the Internet
-- goes directly to children unfiltered by adult caregivers.
"It means that parents are now in serious competition for the attention of their
children, and our attempts to influence them are constantly being diluted by
numerous messages encouraging them to do and think differently from ways we
would like them to," the authors say.
"If we are going to win this competition, we are going to have to be very
effective, and we have to be tenacious," comments Elias. "And we can't take for
granted that just because we're the parents or just because we're the teachers,
our kids are going to cut us a lot of slack and be understanding with us if we
don't do a great job. I think we need to do a better job than ever before."
Elias thinks that parents, particularly those of means, should not contribute to
their teens' sense of entitlement by providing too many material possessions.
Rather, they should encourage their kids to make contributions and have a
sense of responsibility to their families, their communities, their schools and their
neighborhoods. He encourages his own daughters, 17 and 21, to play leadership
and service roles in various groups in addition to their academic work.
Early in the book, the authors provide a review of the principles of emotional
intelligence and emotionally intelligent parenting, including the 24-Karat Golden
Rule: "Do unto your children as you would have other people do unto your
children."
The book also contains various questionnaires, quizzes and questions most
frequently asked by parents; anecdotes and stories of teens, peers and parents;
a "toolbox" of emotionally intelligent parenting techniques; advice on the when,
where and how of parental apology; and an appendix telling readers how to
establish emotionally intelligent parenting circles and networks for mutual
support.
In addition to teaching and writing books to get his message across, Elias has
been writing a column for New Jersey's Star-Ledger for almost a year. At
Rutgers since 1979, he teaches clinical, school and community
psychology and is also affiliated with the Graduate School of Applied and
Professional Psychology and the Allen and Joan Bildner Center for the Study of
Jewish Life.
No-brainer
"Raising Emotionally Intelligent Teenagers: Parenting with
Love, Laughter, and Limits" describes several encounters
between parents and children. These sample dialogues cry out
for a healthy dose of emotional intelligence. Here's one
example:
DAD: I see you have an English assignment left to do and a
test to study for tomorrow.
SAMARA: Yeah, I'm gonna take a break now.
DAD: You've been working for fifteen minutes! What kind of
break?
SAMARA: Dawson's on (referring to "Dawson's Creek" or any
other teen show of the moment) and I have to watch it.
DAD: Hold on. We have a VCR for just this purpose. Tape it
tonight and get your studying done and you can watch
tomorrow.
SAMARA: No way! Everyone in high school is watching
tonight and everyone will be talking about it first thing in
the morning. You must have no brain if you think I'm going
to tape it and watch it tomorrow."
The four Ls
As the book's subtitle suggests, the authors believe that
successful parenting requires a balance of love, laughter
and limits. For good measure, they throw in an extra "L" --
linkages. Here's how they describe these four Ls:
Love: Caring relationships form the foundation of family
life and cooperation. Without this, parents often have only
economic and punitive leverage to use with their teens. And
these are not ideal strategies.
Laughter: Emotions affect how and what we do and are
willing to do. Positive emotions are essential for healthy
adolescent growth. Humor is not frivolous; it's the ultimate
psychic vitamin.
Limits: Limits are not about restriction as much as they
are about focus and direction and boundary-setting. The
skills parents and children possess in goal-setting and
problem solving help keep teens on course and turn good
ideas into constructive actions.
Linkages: Teenagers need to be contributors more than
consumers, and to belong more than to buy. In a world of
increasing complexity and sophistication, parents cannot
expect to "do all" and "be all" for their teens. Our ability
to help them make healthy connections will be at least as
important as things we do for them and with them directly.
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