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Staying Ahead of the Turbulence

I’m blessed to work with teens and their families.  It’s taught me more about parenting and how teens think today than I could have learned any other way.  All parents have to go through the sometimes bumpy teen years. There’s no way around it.  So, in the dawning days of adolescence they often ask me, “How can I get ready for the turbulence ahead?”

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To answer that question for as many people as possible, I’m embarking on a speaking and teaching tour that I hope will be a life-changing event for the parents who attend.  We’re calling it Turbulence Ahead – Parenting Teens Through the Bumpy Years. My goal for these Friday, or Friday and Saturday, events is to help parents raise truly great kids, and to also bring transformation and healing to families who are hurting right now.  The first event is this weekend, September 25-26, in Tulsa.  Visit www.turbulenceahead.org to learn more.

Those attending the live Turbulence Ahead events will learn these and other important points:

Parenting is a Special Calling:  Parents are placed into the authority role in the life of their child, and should consider that role as a calling from God.  It’s tough to remain in a right relationship with a child that chooses a less inviting path through adolescence.  But hang in there!  Understand how today’s teen culture will begin tugging on your child and you’ll be better prepared with positive strategies for when the waters of adolescence begin to churn.  Most of all, kids secretly want their parents to exert parental authority and remain in that role, so don’t disappoint them.

Don’t Push off When You Receive the Brush Off:  Listening is one of your best weapons in the fight for right in the life of your child.   Spend more time listening than offering your own opinion.  Wait for your teen to invite you or ask for your advice, before blurting it out or lecturing. Learn to be quieter, to sit and to listen to your teen’s heart.  This will communicate, without words, that they are valuable and accepted, even when they or you are upset or distressed. 

Be Watchful:  A normal part of growing up is the need to feel acceptance and love not only within the family but by peers.  As teens attempt to find a place among their peers, loosen the reins a little, but remain watchful.  Continue to have a presence in their life – not one that dominates, but one that guides and limits when necessary, and sets free and soars when appropriate.  Learn how to use the tools of their trade (text messaging, cell phones, social networking) to stay in touch.  Call them for reasons other than telling them where to go or what to do.  And spend the time.  Go with them to new places they’ll enjoy, and take along one of their friends.  Invite their friends into your home and you’ll be letting their friends learn your values and know how much you care.  Offer teens freedom, but only as they are willing to take responsibility, and be watchful for signs of maturity and growth all along the way, allowing you to reward them with more freedoms.

Remain Connected:  All too often I see a huge disconnect between parents and teens, and my goal is to help parents find ways to bridge that connection.  Teens desire to remain connected to their parents, even if they don’t show it.  The goal is to help parents of teens to move from always correcting their child to helping them make decisions that will lead to maturity, even if they at first make mistakes.  Allow pre-established consequences to do the correcting, not your anger or disapproval. 

Don’t Ever Quit:  Be to your child what God is to you, an ever present help in time of need.  If you consider the times God has propped you up, helped you out, caused you to grow, or disciplined you in order to get you to a better place in life, then you will easily understand how to view your role. Nurturing a child the way God nurtures us requires grace.  And grace includes the determination to never, ever give up on your child, even when they seemingly give up on you. Don’t ever quit.

If you know of someone in the following cities that would benefit, please tell them.

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Tulsa, Oklahoma – September 25th and 26th: Bethany Free Will Baptist Church 100 North Olive Avenue in Broken Arrow. To register for this event, please call 918.252.5585.

Denver, Colorado — October 10th:  Crossroads Church, 53 East 128th Avenue, Thornton, Colorado. To register for this event, please call 303.452.5332.

Chicago, Illinois — October 31st:  Harvest Bible Chapel. Mark will be speaking at this Saturday event with pastor and radio personality Dr. James MacDonald.

Houston, Texas – November 13th and 14th: Christ Evangelical Presbyterian Church.

Longview, Texas — December 10.

I look forward to seeing and meeting you at one of these events. More information will be on the website at www.turbulenceahead.org as time goes on.

Mark

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Mark Gregston is an author, speaker, national radio host, and the founder of Heartlight, a residential counseling opportunity for adolescents, which houses 50 struggling teenagers.

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Author: Mark Gregston

Mark Gregston began working with teens more than 40 years ago as a youth minister and Young Life director. He has authored nearly two dozen books, has written hundreds of articles, and is host of the nationally-acclaimed Parenting Today’s Teens podcast and radio broadcast.