I know this is how we feel: 'children are a blessing'.....
but teens -- are something else!
There is a saying from Mark Twain that typifies the attitude
many adults have toward teenagers:
“When a child turns twelve you should put him in a barrel, nail the lid down and feed him through a knothole. When he turns sixteen, plug the hole!”
Today, it's more like when they turn 10!
Here is much wisdom from a man who lives deeply, resisting
the world's mould and seeking the Kingdom. I highlights bits for us:
When we are out of sympathy with the young, then I think our
work in this world is over.
–George MacDonald
The teen years are often the most difficult in a person’s
life. They involve intense struggles, feelings, and changes, many of which
teenagers have a hard time verbalizing. Yet I believe that despite the
turbulence of adolescence, these years can be a truly wonderful time. It may be
a difficult period of life, but why should it be an especially negative one? I
wonder if psychologists, sociologists, and the media have so overemphasized the
downside of adolescence that today’s youth cannot help living out the
stereotypes put on them?
Teen years are an age of opportunity instead of a test of
parental endurance. Besides, there is something about youth that we adults need
to learn from. It is often young people who push for real changes.
We have seen this time and again all over the world: the
White Rose movement in Hitler Germany, for example, or the young people who
demonstrated in Tiananmen Square in China, or the growing movement of activism
against war, racism, and environmental exploitation here in the United States.
Actually, the youth of our nation are not being given enough credit for the
many positive things they have done and are doing, especially in light of all
the outside pressures they have to deal with.
But all teenagers also struggle with certain emotional,
physical, intellectual, and social challenges. Their internal worlds consist of
a jumble of tensions: emotional highs and lows, a desire to be left alone and
to be included, a need for freedom and a longing for greater responsibility, a
feeling of invincibility and a fear of failure, questioning authority and the
need to fit in, submitting to peer pressure on the one hand and adult authority
on the other.
For this reason parents and teachers need to have extra-big
hearts for young people. The battle around them, as well as in them, rages in
full force. Very few teenagers pass through these years without at least a few
bumps and bruises. Many are wounded for life. But this is all the more reason
to see it as a privilege to be with youth: to work with them, to share their
joys and struggles, to be a friend to them, and to guide them to what they are meant
to become.
Teens share most easily with adults who have an
understanding and acceptance of themselves. By revealing who you are, by
sharing about the struggles you have had, and by reflecting on your own life
experiences, you are inviting the young person under your care to do the same.
Teenagers appreciate it when an adult is candid and up-front with them. For a
teen, honest sharing means “I trust you enough to tell you the whole story.”
This doesn’t mean they will automatically share what they
are thinking and feeling. Teenagers in general resent having to communicate on
demand. It is rarely helpful to say: “Why don’t you ever share with us? Why
won’t you say something?” This only makes teens clamp up even more. Our role is
to express care and interest in their lives, and to do so through deeds, not by
peppering them with questions.
Also, a good dose of humility can go a long way to reaching
a teenager’s heart. Teens need parents and adults who will admit their own
limitations and say they are sorry. Teens need to see that adults are human.
One young woman wrote to me:
Most kids growing up naturally think that their parents are “the best.” At least this is how it was for me. They knew best and that’s why they had the final say. But when I got into my teen years, wow, everything turned upside down. I became very rebellious and was determined to fight my parents tooth and nail. The day came, however, when I realized that my parents were not perfect people. When I realized that my parents were just like me, that they had their own problems to deal with, that they made mistakes and wrong decisions and would also say they were sorry, my relationship with them began to relax. I could start to open up. It wasn’t just them against me.
I am glad young people question things. And they tend to
question everything – especially if it’s something Mom and Dad hold to. They
often think they know it all, and thus it is tempting to try and put them in
their place. Granted, it is not always easy to determine if a child’s rebellion
is serving the cause of good or of evil (hence prayer is such a powerful refuge
and resource!), and teenagers still have a lot to learn. But we can kill our
relationship with a teenage son or daughter – and teachers can erect instant
walls between themselves and their students – if we fail to really listen to
them. We should never talk at young people, but with them.
There is nothing worse for a young person than to be treated
like a kid. When we treat a young person like an intelligent, thoughtful human
being, that teen will eventually respond and most likely start acting like one!
Out of love for young people, we need to do everything we
can to help them formulate their thinking and express their ideas.
As teens open up, it’s important to listen non-judgmentally.
This doesn’t mean expressing agreement. It only means that you are eager to
know what they are thinking and feeling and that you don’t get all worked up in
response to some outlandish or contradictory remark. (they are dramatic; listen
beyond the words and tone).
Adolescents are thinking about life, questioning and
processing the values that have been instilled in them. They often try on
different ideas (so don't panic and jump to conclusions too soon), much like
the different clothes they wear. The feeling that “now I am an adult and I can
do it better than you” plays a bigger role than we realize. They are in the
process of formulating their own opinions and ideas.
They want to become their
own persons and for this reason will often gravitate towards viewpoints that
differ from their parents and the adults around them. In fact, they often would
rather have their own opinion than be right. This should not be read as a sign
of rejection. (ouch, but give them a chance to explore: like maybe visit other
churches, try out clothes [you can maintain how much cloth there should be]
& music [you can appeal to volume for peace at home]...
The main thing is to keep an open relationship with our
teens. If they feel understood, valued, supported, and trusted, they will
respond – even if begrudgingly at times – to our guidance. To nurture a
relationship doesn’t mean we forgo speaking a straight word when it is needed
or hesitate to set clear boundaries where necessary. In fact, despite
complaints to the contrary, teenagers need and want limits. The issue is how
best to set and enforce them. Teens, of course, will naturally push the limits.
But clear boundaries communicate care and concern. Without rules and structure
teenagers get the message that we adults do not love them or care about their
well-being.
Again and again we need to find ways to let our teenagers
know that we are there for them. We need to keep encouraging them. The word
“encourage” comes from the French and literally means to give someone heart.
Teenagers, like all people, need ten times more positive, supportive feedback
than negative. Concentrate on their accomplishments, not on their failures.
Harold Loukes, the Quaker educator, writes: “The young do
not need to be preached at; they need to be given a task.” We need to entrust
young people with meaningful responsibilities. They need to feel needed.
Teenagers do better, and are happier, when they have useful and necessary tasks
that demand something from them. They want to be counted on.
I will always be grateful for how my father kept pointing me to use every day to serve others; that my happiness depended not on what I could get out of life for myself but in considering others. Young people need to know that every seemingly tiny deed of love can have a tremendous ripple effect. An act of kindness, or standing up for one’s convictions, adds goodness, instead of pain, to our world.
In my experience, young people will take up this challenge. It’s not a matter of pressuring them to follow our path or of making choices for them so they will do “the right thing.” It’s about helping them to see that only by turning to God and looking beyond themselves will their lives obtain true dignity and fulfillment.
gratefully from: Johann Christoph Arnold {The Plough}
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