Sue Scheff: Parenting Teenage Girls

by Sue Scheff on Apr 18, 2009


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Oh, I love getting introduced to new websites, books and more that help parents today with their wonderful children that have reached teen-hood.  Debra Beck is an author and mentor helping parents understand peer pressure, bullying, self body image and other issues that our kids face today.  The following article, written by Debra Beck, is an example of the vital information she has to share with others.

Are We Training Teenage Girls to be Great Deceivers?

by Debra Beck

I read all these articles about keeping a close eye on our teens, to make sure they aren’t making any bad decisions and they are safe. I listen to parents discussing the same issues. How close is too close and what are we teaching our teens, without even knowing it? We read her journal, get on to her My Space account, and listen in on her private telephone calls. Are we sending a message that we care or are we sending a message that we don’t trust our kids?

There’s a fine line between trusting your teenage girls and staying attentive to their safety

The first thing you are teaching her is that honoring some one’s privacy isn’t that big of a deal, if you really need to know something. You are also teaching her how to become an expert liar and a good deceiver. She will learn how to become really sneaky, because the more she knows you are doing these things, the better she will get at learning how to hide them from you. When you push up against something or someone, there is no choice but to get stronger. That’s the way things work. If you are protesting something, the side that is being protested has to get stronger to stay alive. We don’t want to help our teen practice these behaviors. We want to help them make good decisions for themselves.

To trust our teens, we must first understand that
they are teens, and honor their privacy.

Give them the room to be teens, and give them the guidance to learn how to become responsible adults. These teenage years are the years that they are starting to pull away, testing their own boundaries. Don’t push them away more by being a parent that expects them not to be a teen, and will do anything to make sure that they are not behaving like one.

Be a good role model to your teenage girl: you wouldn’t
want her peeking in on your private life.
Don’t peek in on hers either.

Looking at their journal, checking their My Space account and any other sneaky behaviors will push them away from you. Then they are on their own to make decisions which they may not be capable of making. To be available for them you have to understand them and respect them. Just because they are younger doesn’t mean they do not deserve to be respected. We need to help them to become adults who make good decisions for themselves.

By respecting them we help them become respectful adults as well. We want to set a good example, through being a good role model, so decide next time before you peek in places your teen might prefer you didn’t what kind of role model you want to be? Ultimately this will be more valuable than anything you could come across.

For fifteen years, Debra Beck has done workshops with Girl Power, a program sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that is dedicated to helping “encourage and motivate eleven- to sixteen-year-old girls to make the most of their lives.” Her book “My Feet Aren’t Ugly” will resonate with teenage girls and their parents equally for its sound advice and helpful suggestions, based on the author’s own experiences.

 

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Sue Scheff: Teen Self Image and Parenting Resources

by Sue Scheff on Feb 24, 2009


Debra Beck, a parent and Life Coach as well as an author, is a mentor to many young girls in helping them build their self confidence.

Her website www.MyFeetAreUgly.com offers some great advice for parents raising today’s teens and tweens – promoting self esteem and helping them with the peer pressures they face today.

Here is some of her services for Parents and don’t forget to check out the entire website including services for your teens.

Parents Need Help Too!

Debra has been helping parents either develop a more connected relationship or mend a broken relationship with their teenager. She also coaches parents on ways to help their teens learn the skills of responsibility and the ability to make good decisions for themselves.

Debra gives parents the tools they need to help their teenager develop better self-esteem, therefore creating a harmonious relationship between parent and teen.

Parents have always found it easy to discuss issues about their teenagers with Debra; she has no judgments because she has walked in the same shoes they have walked in. Debra’s way of looking at the world and issues facing teenage girls helps parents develop the skills they need to have a more connected and fun relationship with their teenager. Check out My Feet Aren’t Ugly, written for teen girls on self-esteem, and participate through reading the chapters together.

Read more here: http://www.myfeetarentugly.com/parenting-teens.html

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