Living with teenagers is an ordeal, right? Parents can only watch helplessly as their lovable children transform into some sort of unpredictable creatures, correct? No. Even if their kids are moving toward greater independence, moms and dads can still help them to become better human beings. And they can still laugh about the process!
As a follow-up to our earlier list, we at Bored Panda compiled a new collection of tweets about raising teenagers. It includes funny rants, candid everyday pictures, and even a few translations for those of you who aren't well-versed in sighs.
Continue scrolling, upvote your favorite entries, and don't forget to check out the chat we had with Vicki Broadbent, a mom of two boys with a baby girl on the way and the creator of one of the most comprehensive parenting blogs online, Honest Mum.
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Experts say that we often mistakenly give teens the message that they're only good when they're not doing bad things, such as abusing substances, hanging around with the wrong crowd, or having sex. But this can become a self-fulfilling prophecy as negative expectations sometimes actually promote the behavior we fear most.
"Parents of teens have to accept it's normal for children to pull away from them during the teen years so they can carve out their own identity and embrace growing up," Vicki Broadbent, an award-winning lifestyle blogger, parenting expert, and bestselling author of Mumboss (UK) and The Working Mom (the US and Canada), told Bored Panda. "Teenhood is about playing being an adult. Parents are still needed, of course, more so than ever, to provide education, love, support, and boundaries for their kids."
Vicki said it's a good idea to try not to be too hard on your teen, as "rules were made to be broken and they will test you just as you tested your own parents at their age."
Cats are easier than teens in my (thankfully) limited experience of them.
Adolescence can be a confusing time of change for the entire family, but there's plenty you can do to nurture your teen and encourage responsible behavior. "Try to involve them in decisions which affect them and try to break the cycle of constant bickering. Spend some one-on-one time with them but let them lead you, asking what they want to do, see, buy, etc. Get to know their ever-evolving personalities," she added.
"I found my parents teaching me to cook properly (a 3-course meal as well as favorite dishes) was a way we could not only bond together when I was a teen but it was a way to give me a gift of independence too, a means for me to become less reliant on them," Vicki Broadbent said. "You taught your kid to ride a bike, now teach them life skills so they can be adults without you at some point."
Ma raised six boys. She said she never saw the fridge without a boys a*s sticking out of it!
Finding the balance between giving your teenagers freedom and guiding them is a delicate process. Vicki thinks that "teens and preteens (like my eldest) need to know that there are consequences to their actions and explaining how you feel when they go against your wishes is best. Make it about you (this is what other therapists/psychologists have taught me and it works)!"
Discipline is about teaching, not punishment or control. To encourage your teen to behave well, make sure they understand what behavior is acceptable and unacceptable at home, at school, and elsewhere. Enforce these rules with fair and appropriate consequences.
I can personally attest that this is true. I hate my coat. It's too freaking puffy.
I'd sigh to. If I didn't I'd burst into laughter and I don't want peiple to know how much I love dumb puns
"Explain that coming home after their curfew means that you are up with anxiety until they arrive back home and that it's unfair on you, describing how you feel (breathless, tearful, etc)," Vicki Broadbent suggested. "Arrange a plan that they text or call you if they're running late and compromise with them, stating that they have 30 minutes leeway for example to make it home, and after that deadline is broken, they'll find themselves grounded and unable to attend the gig they'd planned to go to next weekend, etc."
"Inform them of what they might lose if they break the rules before they head out though so they're aware of the consequence before they go astray as this might hopefully deter them. Explain that you will give them more space if they build trust with you."
Most parents have more power and influence than they might think!
As the late great George Carlin once said: If you love someone, set them free. If they return, set them on fire.
Do NOT talk to me after waking up. I need until noon.
My hubby shuts down explanations about minecraft immediately, I on the other hand, smile and listen about the Netherworld, the netherite sword, Obsidian, the enderman and god knows what else. I still don't know what any of this is, but atleast my 9yo thinks I do. Oh.... Don't get him started on Thinknoodles...
Learn from the Master! Next time he wants something you don't want to give? "Ah, no.....I'm just not feeling it.....vibes are off".......followed by dramatic sigh and soulful looking out the window...
The way maths is done these days seems so different to how I learnt it. Even for the basics like adding and subtracting.
Clock reads 7:56... Her: "Mom, what time is it?" Me: "It's 8:00" Her: "No It's not! It's 7:56!" 🙄
I have to make sure I tell my daughter to start getting ready, earlier and earlier. She spends more and more time in front of the mirror, as she gets older... she's only 12! It's only going to get worse from here on out... sigh 😏
We put a stop to that at the same age actually. He was gaining too much weight way too fast, and we found out he didn't actually wanted that much food (yet), he just wanted to compete with his friends who could eat the most breadrolls or pasta or everything else. Two years later then it was for real 😂
As a teen, I can confirm all these are true. No one mentioned mood swings though, which surprised me. My mood swings are extreme. I'll be happy, then sad after the smallest thing, and then angry because I'm sad. My poor parents lol
Saw this in a restaurant on our way out. The teenagers wasn't amused when I stopped and took a picture... raising-61...307889.jpg
im a teenager (15) and i dont really act these teens. im glad my parents raised me to be respectful and do loads of chores everyday and not be addicted to technology and not to be dependant or a burden on them
ay, this is a bit unfounded for. Us teenagers can be the worst (mood swings making it worse) and you don't want to be my dad :-(, but people don't tend to go the extra mile without expectation (or motivation). Please do expect more from us, regardless how much we may moan about it
Does no one else remember being a teenager? It sucked entirely. Have patience and pity these poor kids going through it. There is no amount of money on earth that could ever induce me to repeat that experience.
As a mom of two teenagers, I LOVE this age. It is so much fun annoying my sons! I wake them up singing (they hate it), go "it's alive" whenever they leave their rooms, and after years of picky eating now they will eat everything. Plus I also really love that giving them their freedom also means me getting my freedom back. Plus no more kids music and tv-shows
Do people read these posts for the sole purpose of being either an asshole or a know-it-all in the comments?
I had 3 teens if my own and custody of 2 more all in the same house at the same time. Somehow, I survived but WOW
My middle godson to me nearly ten years ago: "Oh my ga-aw-awdddd! I'll never need to know this! I'll have my phoooooone!" Same one, a couple years ago, all boo-yah hoo-ah military Drill Instructor: "Yeah, these kids think their phones'll do it all for them, har har,". (Me thinking: "karma, buddy, karma")
Understanding a teenager is like trying to figure out what color the letter 7 smells like.
TV shows with a solo parent – pretty well always a woman – struggling to make a career and support a stroppy, selfish, hormone-addled s**t head of a teenager have become such a worn-out cliché that we refuse to watch them. One glare, one bad-tempered I-hate-*everybody!* back-chat word from the resident teenager and that show never sees the light of day on our TV again.
We were driving back from town in the rain. Granny and the two younger granddaughters were in the back seat, with oldest granddaughter (12-going-on-16) up front with me. A little old lady in a Ford Focus ran a stop sign in front of us. I hit the brakes and she saw us coming and stopped right in the middle of the intersection as we sledged to a halt a metre from her door.. Grandad, watching her act together and drive away: “Jumpin' Jeepers!” Oldest Granddaughter (head down, tapping at her iPod): “That will be you in a couple of years”. (Four years later I was giving her driving lessons…)
I don't know what I did or didn't do, maybe it's not forcing her to do housework, but my daughter never went through the terrible teens. She did stay a lot in her room, but she never played loud music (except on headphones), never stomped around slamming doors, never stayed out late (cos there's no where near us to stay out late at) And now, at 24, she's wiser than I am.
I think it's sad that people love to complain about their kids whatever their age. YOU'RE THE ONLY REASON THEY EXIST IN THE FIRST PLACE. PUT UP AND SHUT UP
I am VERY pleased to see that all this ire is not just from women, that men have something to do with their teens, too. Double the fun when having to speak to teens . . .
I simply refused to stay in my sons (then 14) room longer than absolutely necessary. He had invited a girl for the first time and turned his whole room upside down to get rid of the hideous smell in it. 3 hours of extreme cleaning (I was impressed). The smell was still "there" ... and it was totally exhausted and desperate. I then redeemed him by sending him into the shower and giving him clean clothes. And ... oh wonder, the nasty smell was gone! :D
None of these apply to me and I feel kind of weird about that. Anyone else?
Honestly by the sounds of it these teens hate their parents.
They don't. The hormonal changes are extreme - some teenager do feel they are on another planet. They really are not adults nor children....
Load More Replies...Y'all think having teens is so bad, but coming from a teen who has several siblings with severe mental conditions and who arent able to live at home because they are so unsafe, you sound like a bunch of pathetic whiners. You're the parents for gods sake get yourself together. Heaven forbid your teenager be their own person and not act exactly how you want them to. Be glad your teenager just enjoys living life being themselves and isnt a mentally unstable psychopath because believe me, its worse. You think you sound so freaking clever talking about how awful teens are but thank your lucky stars your teen isn't so unsafe that they can't be around other people, because it isn't as fun as it sounds.
As a teen, I can confirm all these are true. No one mentioned mood swings though, which surprised me. My mood swings are extreme. I'll be happy, then sad after the smallest thing, and then angry because I'm sad. My poor parents lol
Saw this in a restaurant on our way out. The teenagers wasn't amused when I stopped and took a picture... raising-61...307889.jpg
im a teenager (15) and i dont really act these teens. im glad my parents raised me to be respectful and do loads of chores everyday and not be addicted to technology and not to be dependant or a burden on them
ay, this is a bit unfounded for. Us teenagers can be the worst (mood swings making it worse) and you don't want to be my dad :-(, but people don't tend to go the extra mile without expectation (or motivation). Please do expect more from us, regardless how much we may moan about it
Does no one else remember being a teenager? It sucked entirely. Have patience and pity these poor kids going through it. There is no amount of money on earth that could ever induce me to repeat that experience.
As a mom of two teenagers, I LOVE this age. It is so much fun annoying my sons! I wake them up singing (they hate it), go "it's alive" whenever they leave their rooms, and after years of picky eating now they will eat everything. Plus I also really love that giving them their freedom also means me getting my freedom back. Plus no more kids music and tv-shows
Do people read these posts for the sole purpose of being either an asshole or a know-it-all in the comments?
I had 3 teens if my own and custody of 2 more all in the same house at the same time. Somehow, I survived but WOW
My middle godson to me nearly ten years ago: "Oh my ga-aw-awdddd! I'll never need to know this! I'll have my phoooooone!" Same one, a couple years ago, all boo-yah hoo-ah military Drill Instructor: "Yeah, these kids think their phones'll do it all for them, har har,". (Me thinking: "karma, buddy, karma")
Understanding a teenager is like trying to figure out what color the letter 7 smells like.
TV shows with a solo parent – pretty well always a woman – struggling to make a career and support a stroppy, selfish, hormone-addled s**t head of a teenager have become such a worn-out cliché that we refuse to watch them. One glare, one bad-tempered I-hate-*everybody!* back-chat word from the resident teenager and that show never sees the light of day on our TV again.
We were driving back from town in the rain. Granny and the two younger granddaughters were in the back seat, with oldest granddaughter (12-going-on-16) up front with me. A little old lady in a Ford Focus ran a stop sign in front of us. I hit the brakes and she saw us coming and stopped right in the middle of the intersection as we sledged to a halt a metre from her door.. Grandad, watching her act together and drive away: “Jumpin' Jeepers!” Oldest Granddaughter (head down, tapping at her iPod): “That will be you in a couple of years”. (Four years later I was giving her driving lessons…)
I don't know what I did or didn't do, maybe it's not forcing her to do housework, but my daughter never went through the terrible teens. She did stay a lot in her room, but she never played loud music (except on headphones), never stomped around slamming doors, never stayed out late (cos there's no where near us to stay out late at) And now, at 24, she's wiser than I am.
I think it's sad that people love to complain about their kids whatever their age. YOU'RE THE ONLY REASON THEY EXIST IN THE FIRST PLACE. PUT UP AND SHUT UP
I am VERY pleased to see that all this ire is not just from women, that men have something to do with their teens, too. Double the fun when having to speak to teens . . .
I simply refused to stay in my sons (then 14) room longer than absolutely necessary. He had invited a girl for the first time and turned his whole room upside down to get rid of the hideous smell in it. 3 hours of extreme cleaning (I was impressed). The smell was still "there" ... and it was totally exhausted and desperate. I then redeemed him by sending him into the shower and giving him clean clothes. And ... oh wonder, the nasty smell was gone! :D
None of these apply to me and I feel kind of weird about that. Anyone else?
Honestly by the sounds of it these teens hate their parents.
They don't. The hormonal changes are extreme - some teenager do feel they are on another planet. They really are not adults nor children....
Load More Replies...Y'all think having teens is so bad, but coming from a teen who has several siblings with severe mental conditions and who arent able to live at home because they are so unsafe, you sound like a bunch of pathetic whiners. You're the parents for gods sake get yourself together. Heaven forbid your teenager be their own person and not act exactly how you want them to. Be glad your teenager just enjoys living life being themselves and isnt a mentally unstable psychopath because believe me, its worse. You think you sound so freaking clever talking about how awful teens are but thank your lucky stars your teen isn't so unsafe that they can't be around other people, because it isn't as fun as it sounds.