How to Stop Losing Your Cool When Your Teen is Losing Theirs
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Parents play a crucial role in the social and emotional development of their children. Barring any neurological disorders, a child learns to self-regulate in age appropriate ways. Caregivers expect to be getting up at all hours with a fussy baby, settling disputes between dueling toddlers, and slaying the dragon hiding in the closet. With each passing year, adults expect children to soothe themselves, resolve their own conflicts, and move through the world independently.
The truth is, self-regulation is dependent upon co-regulation with parents, caregivers, coaches, and teachers. This instinctive coping mechanism, passed from adult to child, is a set of strategies used by adults to support youth in self-regulating, according to Co-Regulation From Birth Through Young Adulthood: A Practice Brief.
Young children aren’t the only group in need of co-regulation. An adolescent’s neurobiological development is at a rate second only to infancy. At this rapid pace of maturation, tweens, teens and young adults need adult support through middle and high school transitions, hormonal swings, heartbreak, friendship drama, and standardized tests. Young people are still learning their internal and external triggers, don’t recognize the severity of their dysregulation, and reject the very thing they need: an invested caregiver.
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Scientists at the National Institute of Mental Health write that the brain is not fully formed until a person is 26 years old. Until then, youth lack skills like planning, prioritizing, and making good decisions. Almost every parent of a teenager can relate to being asked to sign a form at the last minute or been witness to the meltdown that ensues when their child realizes their cleats are in their other bag at home and practice is about to start.
In light of a teen’s immaturity, adults should respond with predictable, warm, and responsive interactions to help their child understand their emotions and adjust their behavior accordingly. However, this is easier said than done in the heat of the moment when it’s hard for caregivers to remember that the teen standing before them is not a monster (or an adult!). If a parent isn’t careful, they might find themselves matching octaves or tossing out punishments. Perhaps they had a bad day at work, have inadequate support from a partner, or are aggravated that the same issue keeps arising. Their teen’s inability to self-regulate might trigger a flashback from their own childhood. Ultimately nothing is accomplished … the teen is no closer to self-regulation, and may decide his parent is emotionally incapable of supporting him.
The temptation for a teen to turn to a friend instead of a safe adult is high, especially when everyone in the house is dysregulated. Despite themselves, teens need a soft place to land, and parents must self-regulate — breathe, go for a walk — before attempting to support their teen.