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Parenting Your Teen: Passwords and Code Phrases

One of the best tools any parent can give a young child is a family password, usually a word that the child has chosen. This is the word that protects them from the predators in the world. We teach our kids that if someone they don't know tries to talk to them, invites them to go for a ride, says their mom or dad wants them to let this person give them a ride home, then this person must also know the family password. In essence, nonfamily members can learn the password only from a family member. If someone outside the family knows the word, then that person can be trusted. If that person doesn't know the word, your child says that his mommy and daddy won't let him do anything without first hearing the password. And then your child can do whatever it takes to get away: be rude, yell, run, scream, walk away.

This is a great idea with young children, but it changes when your kids enter adolescence. Now you move from the family password to the family code phrase.

By the time your kids are teenagers, they know the right thing to do in just about any circumstance (see Teenagers: Self-Esteem Through Integrity). However, this does not mean they always do what they know is the right thing. Sometimes this is because of a yearning for a new experience; sometimes to fit in with a new group of friends; sometimes because they are bored; and sometimes because they don't have the strength to say no. When they fail to do the right thing because of this last reason—they don't have the internal strength to say no—this is exactly where the family code phrase comes to the rescue. In any situation that requires your teenager to take two big steps forward in responsibility when they are capable of only one step forward, the family code phrase helps you to meet them halfway.

Like the password, the code phrase is something that your teenager is familiar with and it's a phrase known only to family members. The simpler the better. The names of nonexistent relatives is a favorite of mine: Aunt Rose, Uncle Mickey. This is how it works: As soon as your teenager utters this phrase while in conversation with you, your job is simple: to say no to whatever she is asking. Then, no matter how much of a struggle she puts up, hold your ground. Let her have the full range of her abilities to argue with you and to make a scene if necessary. It's worth it, and here's why.

The point of the code phrase is that it's a means for your teenager to say to you There's something going on here that I don't want to be a part of, but it's too big a leap for me to take to get out of it now. I need your help. Please say no to what I ask and then let me make a fuss so that I can save face in front of my friends. Please! Instantly, you know that your teenager is in over his head, that he needs your help, that he is clear about the help that he needs, and that whatever follows is not meant personally.

This mom did a wonderful job of meeting her daughter halfway, and so did her daughter by meeting her mom at the same place. But doing so is never a free ride, as we see how the mom was left holding the anxiety far into the night, long after her daughter had fallen asleep. And this is just one more reason why parenting a teenager is the toughest job you'll ever have.

Your teenager counts on your quiet presence and deep confidence in her more than she can or will ever tell you. And when you see this for yourself, it becomes easier and easier to listen to her more deeply and to reassure her more concisely, which in turn deepens the connection between the two of you.

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Copyright © 2003 by Michael Riera. Excerpted from Staying Connected to Your Teenager with permission of its publisher, Perseus Books Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

To order this book visit perseusbooksgroup.com.


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