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Home » teens / teenagers » Page 4

School Horror: Lazy Kids

This entry is part 2 of 3 in the series School Horrors

A few weeks ago, I starting writing about horror stories that happen at school when teachers are not aware of how their actions affect the children and when they do not know what is happening in kids’ lives outside of school. The teacher in today’s story is kind, loves her students and does an amazingly great job under tough circumstances, but despite her best intentions, something went horribly wrong.

While my previous post was about events that happened 38 years ago (you can calculate my age now), this event took place just recently at a school nearby.

Sharon was a 6th Grade teacher and tried very hard to make Josh participate in class activities. Josh was just a lazy kid. He did not do his homework, he was rude and violent towards other kids and was a typical troublemaker. Every day he was absent from school was a great day. She tried giving him tasks, helped him and did all the regular behavior management things to get him interested and engaged, but nothing worked. When she thought she had exhausted all her options, she decided to call his home and tell Josh’s parents about his behavior. His parents said, “Thank you for letting us know. We’ll talk to Josh and make sure he never causes any more trouble at school”.

The following day, Josh came to class and was very quiet. It was a summer day, but he was wearing a long-sleeved jumper. Sharon felt something was wrong with that and asked him to stay with her after class. She asked him about the jumper. At first, he said he was a bit cold in the morning, but eventually, she asked him to take off his shirt, just for a second. When he took his shirt off, she discovered that all his body was bruised. She started crying. She called the office and asked someone to come straight away, because she felt she could not cope with the enormous guilt. She knew he had been beaten because she had called his parents.

Read School Horror: Lazy Kids »

Published: May 25, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Education / Learning Tags: bullying, k-12 education, academic performance, kids / children, teens / teenagers, school, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, success, behavior / discipline, emotional intelligence, violence, education / learning, motivation, practical parenting / parents, society

My Kid Wants a Tattoo: How to Prevent

This entry is part 2 of 2 in the series My Kid Wants a Tattoo

Lucky me, I have 3 kids who are 23, 16 and 10 years old and they have never asked to get a tattoo. If you also believe your kids will never be able to predict what the future holds for them and would like to reduce the chances they will ask to get a tattoo, here is what I have done and I hope it will give you some ideas.

If you see a beautiful tattoo and you like it, say right in front of your kids that you think it is beautiful. Make sure you separate the beauty from the act of burning the skin. You do not want them to think you are old in your mindset and do not understand anything about beauty.

Let your kids express themselves. If they want to start putting makeup early, let them do it. Noff has had her own makeup kit since the age of 3. She used to go to daycare with her face full of lipstick (even as eye shadow). Makeup can be cleaned with soap, not with a knife.

Allow your kids to enjoy face painting everywhere they go. Learn how to do face painting yourself and do it from time to time. Each time their face is painted, ask them if they would like to have it for the rest of their life. Ignore the answer. You are only planting the question in their head.

Read My Kid Wants a Tattoo: How to Prevent »

Published: May 21, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting Tags: how to, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, choice, identity, practical parenting / parents, motivation, relationships / marriage, society, lifestyle, kids / children, vision, teens / teenagers, responsibility, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, emotional intelligence, behavior / discipline

Troubled Teens: Terrible Times

This entry is part 4 of 4 in the series Troubled Teens

In the last three weeks, I gave you a sneak peek into teenagers’ minds. Many parents say to me, “If I only knew what’s happening in their mind…” and I think they have only forgotten what was on their mind when they were teens, or maybe they have forgotten the struggles their friends had during the toughest periods of their life – adolescence.

Here are the last 5 typical teenager thoughts and tips to prevent or eliminate them.

I prefer to be alone

“Thank God they are going away this weekend. I can have the house to myself. I can watch TV as much as I like, play the computer as much as I like and eat whatever I want. Freedom at last!”

What parents can do

When kids reach the teen years, they loves to be on their own sometimes and it is normal and healthy for them to be on their own. Even bringing a babysitter to stay with them (to take care of the other kids, of course) can give them that sense of freedom and it is not a sign of your good or bad parenting.

Having an evening when they can do something different is very attractive to teenagers and as a parent, you need to provide them with opportunities for such time. I remember myself at the age of 15 having the time of my life when my parents were away for the weekend. I did all the same things I did when they were there, but it felt better. On evenings when they went out, we played hide and seek in the dark and I still have wonderful memories of those special days.

Read Troubled Teens: Terrible Times »

Published: May 11, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Teens / Teenagers Tags: role model, teens / teenagers, fear, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, trust, behavior / discipline, identity, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, rules, freedom, communication, change, focus, motivation, responsibility, social skills, money, family matters, emotional intelligence, attitude, how to, kids / children

Troubled Teens: Scary Times

This entry is part 3 of 4 in the series Troubled Teens

This series is meant to help parents of teens and parents of kids who are turning into teens understand what teenagers think and what they go through as part of this tough period of their life. Each “twisted” thought is followed by something parents can do to help their teenagers and everyone else involved.

As in previous chapters, here are 5 things teens think and feel that scare them and make them act weird, and what you can do about them. I hope it will help you find alternative ways to address the issues and prevent them from keeping those thoughts any longer.

My parents are cruel and weak

“I think my parents are cruel. They hate me. They scream, shout and always tell me I’m wrong. They brought me into the world to torture me. They are weak. How can I trust them when I need help if they are so weak?”

What parents can do

When children are upset, they may think that you are behaving the way you do with the ultimate purpose of hurting them. Many parents mistake discipline for power when in fact, abusing your power and yelling, shouting or telling kids they are wrong are signs of weakness and may cause your children, especially teenagers, not to trust you to support them when they need help. This is because using pressure and force is all about you, not them.

Read Troubled Teens: Scary Times »

Published: May 4, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Teens / Teenagers, Parenting Tags: self confidence / self esteem / self worth, rules, freedom, communication, change, focus, motivation, responsibility, social skills, money, family matters, emotional intelligence, attitude, how to, kids / children, role model, teens / teenagers, fear, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, trust, behavior / discipline, identity

My Kid Wants a Tattoo: Short-term Thinking

This entry is part 1 of 2 in the series My Kid Wants a Tattoo

I love tattoos. As a visual person, I find a lot of beauty in tattoos. I think tattoos are a form of art. I can find many justifications for having a tattoo. Much like most women (and some men) use makeup to make themselves look pretty, I can understand having a tattoo to look pretty. Although today, I will not get any piercing to damage my body, I can still remember that when I was younger, I decided to have a second piercing in one of my ears (my ears had each been pierced once by our neighbor when I was about 7 or 8 years old).

Still, I have to say it scares me to think of my kids getting a tattoo. I imagine their soft skin that I bathed and touched being damaged and it really frightens me to think that people damage their skin to look pretty.

Tattoos are a very sensitive topic. If you ask every person that wants to carve their skin and damage their body beyond repair on their motives, they will always say, “I like it!” or “It’s beautiful”, and I believe them. Some tattoos are amazingly beautiful. What I do not understand is having a beautiful tattoo that you cannot enjoy, because you put them on your neck or on your back and you cannot see them.

The problem with kids wanting a tattoo is that kids cannot imagine the future. They cannot imagine a time when their dazzling tattoo will become a problem. Unlike piercing in your ears, your nose or even your tongue, which you can hide by taking the jewelry out when you go to an interview or a tiny braid in your hair that you can cut off just before your wedding, tattoos are permanent and you cannot just make them disappear.

Read My Kid Wants a Tattoo: Short-term Thinking »

Published: April 30, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting Tags: relationships / marriage, society, lifestyle, kids / children, vision, teens / teenagers, responsibility, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, emotional intelligence, behavior / discipline, how to, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, choice, identity, practical parenting / parents, motivation

Troubled Teens: Disturbing Thoughts

This entry is part 2 of 4 in the series Troubled Teens

Being a teenager is not easy. Being a parent of teenagers is not easy either, but there are ways for parents to help make life easier for both. Here is a list of 5 more thoughts that teens have, which your behavior and attitude as a parent can change to make the teen years much nicer.

I must be adopted

“Maybe I was adopted. That explains the way they treat me. I’ve heard them saying I looked like Mom, but I look at my photos as a baby and I don’t look like either one of my parents or even like myself today. They could have adopted me when I was just a baby. That makes sense. I think this is why they love my brother more than they love me.”

What parents can do

Every child has this horrible thought at some stage. It is very natural to question your parents’ behavior as that of adoptive parents. There is no real way to prevent this thought from getting into kids’ mind, but there are good ways to make sure it will go away quickly, before it creates any damage.

Talk to your kids about their birth and talk about it a lot. Kids ask question about their pregnancy and birth to check if all the stories match. If Mom tells one story and Dad tells another one about the same birth, that will be odd, but if they tell the stories over and over and everything matches, they must be true!

Read Troubled Teens: Disturbing Thoughts »

Published: April 27, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Teens / Teenagers Tags: identity, change, practical parenting / parents, motivation, relationships / marriage, communication, lifestyle, projection, family matters, emotional intelligence, kids / children, how to, teens / teenagers, role model, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, trust, behavior / discipline, beliefs, self confidence / self esteem / self worth

Troubled Teens: Confusing Years

This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series Troubled Teens

In the past, people thought that teens’ behavior during the teenage years was directly connected to physical changes they start to experience at the age of 12, which makes them feel strange with their body changes and confuses them. Today, the approach is that adolescence is a more gradual process that starts with the first time children want to try doing things on their own, sometime as early as the age of 3.

If teenagers seem confused to you, it is mainly because they have reached a point in their life when they need to define who they are, what they think, what they like or hate, what their beliefs are and what they wants to be later on in life. These thoughts are tough. I know many adults who have not reached that self-definition yet, so this is not easy for a 12-year-old to do, although they are expected to have some clue about it.

Around the age of 10, beliefs that were part of children’s identity are shattered and they need to put the pieces together to survive emotionally. Kids with high emotional intelligence can do that, but most cannot, so they have to ask for help from those who unintentionally create the problem – their parents or their teachers.

This series will give you a sneak peek into teens’ confused brain and help you understand why it is so hard do be a teenager. I still remember my adolescence, I am raising my second teen, the third one is reaching puberty soon and I have worked with lots of teenagers in the last 25 years, so this list is quite reliable.

Read Troubled Teens: Confusing Years »

Published: April 20, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Teens / Teenagers Tags: self confidence / self esteem / self worth, focus, change, school, motivation, responsibility, social skills, emotional intelligence, family matters, siblings, k-12 education, how to, attitude, role model, kids / children, fear, teens / teenagers, trust, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, identity, behavior / discipline, communication, rules

Anorexia: Exaggerated Perception

This entry is part 4 of 8 in the series Anorexia

People with eating disorders like anorexia often have an exaggerated perception of life. It is as if they see the world through huge magnifying glasses and things that seem minor to others seem huge and overwhelming to them.

If you have anorexia or any other eating disorder, or if you have a child that has it and you want to help, it is important to focus on the thoughts and the mindset and not on the food. Not eating is not the problem. It is the solution that people with a distorted perception find for their problems.

Avoid trying to convince them to eat. It only makes things worse. Anorexic people need control, not a nagger.

Avoid punishing a child who has anorexia. It only increases their helplessness and their desire to control something (ANYTHING) in their life, like what they eat, when they eat and how much they eat.

Generally, anorexic people have a very bad self-image, considering self as useless, not worthy, a failure, stupid, an idiot, etc, and they use every little thing that happens in their life to reinforce it. They use their glasses to look for proof they are worthless and they do not consider single events as temporary or coincidental, but as part of their identity.

Here is a list of thoughts that make big things out of small things and demonstrates the effect of the huge magnifying glasses anorexic people wear. Each one you get rid of will reduce the magnifying effect.

Read Anorexia: Exaggerated Perception »

Published: April 16, 2012 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Emotional Intelligence, Health / Wellbeing Tags: perception, projection, family matters, emotional intelligence, teens / teenagers, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, how to, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, choice, health / wellbeing, beliefs, practical parenting / parents, identity, eating disorders, diet, anorexia, focus

I See You

Pressure is an isolating feeling. People under pressure see themselves as if they were under attach and their top priority is to survive, if only emotionally. So they focus on their own feelings, regard most interactions with suspicion and withdraw into a “safe space” as much as they can.

The problem with pressure is that it also damages our ability to reason and function severely. It interferes with remembering things, with being creating and with our perception of what goes on around us. We see the world through narrow slits in a thick armor, we see everything tinted bright red, we hear everything pitchy and sharp and very little makes sense.

Intense pressure can even make us feel like there is no hope and nobody to help us. It is as if we are invisible.

A long time ago, I saw a movie, I think it was Ordinary People, where a mother walked over to her teenage son, touched him gently and said, “I see you”. That line stuck with me and I have used the idea in it many times with the people I love.

I think the “I see you” method works well because the other person is using an invisible shield that is very effective at blocking direct methods, like advice, jokes and uninvited help. It works especially well with teenagers, who see many things as threats to their identity and independence.

Read I See You »

Published: March 21, 2012 by Gal Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Teens / Teenagers, Relationships / Marriage Tags: communication, needs, focus, kids / children, touch, teens / teenagers, love, stress / pressure, emotional intelligence, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, how to, behavior / discipline, identity, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, relationships / marriage, friends / friendship, social skills, practical parenting / parents, family matters, bullying

Predictably Happy Kids

As parents, we are supposed to do what is best for our kids. One of the biggest choices we all need to make is how to develop our kids when they too young to choose for themselves. Obviously, without being able to see into their future, this could be a case of the blind leading the blind.

But maybe it does not have to be.

In the past few days, I have been reading an excellent book called Predictably Irrational by Professor Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist at MIT. In one of the chapters, he describes experiments that show humans are so sensitive to loss they do everything they can to avoid losing even things they could have, but do not actually have. One of these things, he says, is options.

In his description, he give parents’ decision-making about their children’s development as an example of how irrationally expensive it is to keep our kids’ options open. If you do the math, he says, you see that spreading the family resources over 4 different activities each week, say ballet, piano, art and karate, means your child makes 1 unit of progress in each of them every week, as opposed to choosing just one activity, say piano, which would allow the child to make 4 units of progress every week and become really good at it.

I was tempted to agree, and this post was almost about how much his point made sense, but then Eden and I went for our morning walk (it is so great she starts late on Wednesdays) and reviewed her life, the lives of Tsoof and Noff and those of other kids we know, and my view of this issue changed completely.

Read Predictably Happy Kids »

Published: March 7, 2012 by Gal Baras
Last modified: March 19, 2021In: Parenting Tags: early childhood, kids / children, responsibility, teens / teenagers, emotional intelligence, stress / pressure, how to, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, choice, education / learning, happiness, practical parenting / parents, motivation, goals / goal setting, social skills, dreams, career, focus, academic performance

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