Anonymous wrote:OP here. The idea that the teen brain craves stimulation, and it will take either positive or negative stimulation to get its need met.
So, praising works to fulfill that need, but you getting mad at them and having a big brew-ha-ha also fills that stimulation need--both parental responses help hardwire the teen's prior behavior into their system because both rewards their brain.
So the trick is, when they do something you don't like, to give them zero stimulation rather than getting upset with them. Zero brain stimulation is the only way to avoid the hard-wiring of the behavior, or to lessen the effect of previously hard-wired behavior. (Meaning, you give no drama).
So if you say, "Stop doing X" and teen says, "No, I'm doing X" instead of forcing that issue "Stop doing X Now!" blah blah….you say, super-calmly (I actually am saying it pleasantly) "Ok, fine, you can choose to do X, but, you know, if you do, you get no Y tomorrow."
The other thing I took from it is that when my teen said or did something, I don't take it as a larger issue, "he doesn't respect his father" or "he's growing up so rude,"--now I take it as, "it's a phase, he knows how to be respectful because I taught him how, before the phase…"
I read it a week ago. Last night I received, "Good night, mom. I love you." (To which I gave a lot of brain stimulation back!!)
Anonymous wrote:Shoot, I think this also might explain my 6 year old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very difficult to attend to the positive things that my kids do because when they are reading, playing together, etc., I'm just so happy to get a break and so I don't acknowledge that behavior. Then, when all hell breaks loose, as it always does, I swoop in to say stop fighting, etc. So all they heard was me attending to the negative things that they were doing and they learned that negative things get attention. It is an extremely difficult habit to break and is not something that comes naturally to me.
I have a younger child, but this is a really good reminder for me too.
Anonymous wrote:It's very difficult to attend to the positive things that my kids do because when they are reading, playing together, etc., I'm just so happy to get a break and so I don't acknowledge that behavior. Then, when all hell breaks loose, as it always does, I swoop in to say stop fighting, etc. So all they heard was me attending to the negative things that they were doing and they learned that negative things get attention. It is an extremely difficult habit to break and is not something that comes naturally to me.
Anonymous wrote:Amazon is going to wonder about all the crazy teens in the DC area. Just hope we don't create surge pricing on each other. Thanks.

Anonymous wrote:Now. Call your moms and dads and apologize. You too were a teen once!

Anonymous wrote:Shoot, I think this also might explain my 6 year old.
