4 Keys To Peaceful Communication
By Tami Walsh
Dec 17, 2007, 22:19
Areas of Mother-Daughter Conflict Include But Aren’t Limited To:
- Independence/Power Struggles
- Curfew
- Friends you believe are negative influences
- Grades/Academic Performance
- Choices/Decision Making
- Homework/Procrastination
- Dating
- Drinking/Drugs
- Taking personal responsibility for her life/her priorities, etc.
- Respect/Attitude/Talking Back
- Parties without adult supervision
There
are also some additional timely conflict areas given the access to
internet sites such as YOUTube, MySpace and Facebook.com. Anxiety
levels between mothers and daughters often center around those sites
and the content girls want to display as well as the amount of time
girls spend on them.
As
your eternal optimist and parenting coach, I am here to say, there are
a few key ways to bridge these gaps and have more closeness and
connection.
1. Talk to Other Moms Regularly
Learn
what other moms are experiencing with their daughters. When children
are younger, moms communicated more with each other on the playground,
etc. As children become teens, it becomes harder to connect with other
parents because teens’ social lives are in “their hands.”
Remedy:
It is important to communicate and connect with other moms. Have lunch
and talk. Reach out to others who are not necessarily your close
friends as well. You can learn a lot about what YOUR relationship by
talking to other moms. You can also “band together” to raise your teen
safely and feel “in the loop” on her life.
Bonus Idea:
Create a forum for other parents to discuss issues and concerns by
hosting a lunch or brunch in your home. And you can choose to let your
teen know or not know that you are doing so. That’s YOUR right as a
parent.
2. Listening
Listening is the foundation of all good communication. How do you talk
to your teen when she has an attitude or won’t communicate? When she
comes home from school, she may be ranting and raving about a teacher
or coach who has singled her out. You feel angry and reactive because
of her bad attitude or tone of voice, yet you know she is upset and you
want to help. What can you do?
Remedy:
Learn to listen and do what I call the “pause and parrot” technique.
For 60 seconds, actually looking at the second hand on your watch, stay
completely quiet. Listen without interrupting or saying anything. Don’t
give advice or try to fix it.
After
the 60 seconds, “feed back” or “parrot” what your daughter is saying
versus giving her feedback. For example, your daughter is ranting and
complaining about how much her math teacher hates her, you look at your
watch and time yourself for 60 seconds and even if your daughter asks
if you are listening just nod your head affirmatively. After one
complete minute, you would say something like, “you are really angry at
your teacher” or “you really feel like she/he is out to get you don’t
you?”
Initially
your teenager may look at your sideways (especially if you have
traditionally been Fix-It-Mom) but doing this will most likely reduce
the level of ranting and raving and let her know you empathize with her
struggle.
Here’s The Key:
Teens want to feel heard and more than anything they want to feel like
you understand them. Using the “pause and parrot” technique lets your
daughter know that you are listening without judging and you are a safe
person to go to when she has a problem.
Bonus: When
she feels listened to and heard, she is in a better position to solve
her own problems or possibly take suggestions from you! Cool!!
3. Effective Dialoging
All mom’s can relate to being the recipient of the “teen eye roll” or
the blank stare. These are indicators that your daughter is shutting
you off. This can occur when she feels you are lecturing, preaching or
repeating yourself (teens HATE that!)
Remedy:
Instead of sounding like a broken record to your teen, ask questions to
get her thinking. For example, one of my client’s daughters came home
from school and she had a list of friends she wanted to invite to her
sweet 16 party. Her mom looked over the list and saw the name of a girl
she couldn’t believe her daughter had thought to invite because this
girl had historically treated the daughter horribly. (Can you relate?)
The
mom launched right in to what I call “teacher mode” and began to badger
her daughter to find out why she had included the girl’s name on the
list. The daughter got defensive and shut down, feeling undermined by
her mom’s questioning. This is a tough situation and one that I
empathize with mom’s on. How can your daughter think of inviting a girl
who had been so mean to her just months ago to the point of tears, and
now think of including her on her special birthday celebration? It’s so
difficult to detach from your own emotions and allow your daughter the
dignity to make her own choice, but YOU HAVE TO DO IT! You don’t
however have to stay completely quiet about this. I recommend you ask
questions to get your daughter thinking about her choice to invite this
girl. For example, you can say something like this:
“I
see you have such a great list here and a lot of friends you want to
invite. This is going to be a terrific party. I noticed you have
“---------“ name on this list. What makes you want to invite her to the
party? Do you think you’ll be comfortable having her there” If you ask
these questions in a gentle way (not from a heated or charged place
because of your personal disdain for this girl) she will tend to think
about how she might feel rather than become defensive or shut down.
4. Four-to-One Rule
Remedy:
Every time you hear yourself make a demand, or critical comment, find
four ways to acknowledge or praise your daughter. This also applies to
daughters for their mothers. (Glad you’ll be getting more “thank you’s”
soon?) This will bring you both out of the vacuum of being critical and
become more respectful of your relationship.
Bonus Exercise:
Take 5 minutes each night and go into your daughter’s room. For 5
minutes tell each other what you value and you appreciate about one
another. This reduces tension and builds a bridge immediately.