Featured Articles

Adventures in Post-Divorce Dating

By Heather Setrakian, MA

As part of an article that I’m writing for eHarmony Parenting, I started to research dating for divorced parents. Interestingly, while there have been several studies on remarriage and step-parenting and the general effects of divorce on family- very few exist for dating while divorced.

“Where’s Your Common Sense?” Inside the Teen Brain

By Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D.

Why can’t she think before she acts? Why does he get so emotional so easily? How much freedom do I give her to decide how she spends her time? How do I give him the skills he needs for meaningful relationships?

Do questions like these ever run through your mind? If so, you might be interested in hearing about some cutting-edge science on the adolescent brain that helps shed some light on these questions.

What Kids Need Most

By Hal Edward Runkel, LMFT

In a couple of weeks I’m participating in a panel discussion at a local high school. There, in front of a very large crowd, I will join four other experts discussing the dangers, the patterns (and the strategies to combat) teenage drug use. The panel discussion is titled “Drug Awareness and Prevention Seminar,” and the PTA is marketing it through a number of channels. Hundreds of anxious parents can be expected.


A Clean Room

By Hal Edward Runkel, LMFT

clean roomOne of the principles of ScreamFree Parenting is that “Kids Need Their Room”. This is not just about giving them physical space, but about giving them the room they need to grow up, to make mistakes, to make their own decisions.

In order to give kids space to express themselves, to give them a sense of ownership, ScreamFree Parents are encouraged to give kids their own room. That means we as parents have to respect that it is their space to manage as they see fit. If we need to have the room clean or set up in a certain way to calm our own anxiety, and we find our selves cleaning it and arranging it (or sometimes worse, nagging or yelling at our kids to clean it up), then it is not really their room, is it?

In our continuing effort toward becoming ScreamFree Parents, we have attempted to give our teenager his space by allowing him to keep his room as he wants: that means there are skateboard stickers everywhere, posters of bands he likes, and yes, sometimes it’s a real mess.

That’s why it was so refreshing to find a note on his door the other day, underneath the do not enter sign, and above the chemical hazard zone sign that said “Dad: please wake me up early so I can clean my room.”

It’s so exciting when we see this behavior because we see our teenager is making his own decision here. He is becoming self directed. More effective than any amount of nagging, yelling or bribing that we could do to encourage him to clean up his room is his own personal motivation to do so. (We think that much of the influence had to do with him having some girls over to visit — but if that’s what motivates him that’s a whole lot better than us nagging or screaming at him!)

Now the next phase of self-direction for our teen is to have him wake himself up in the morning! What a wonderful journey parenting is.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 4.33 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading …

Leave a Reply