Ep 327: Getting Teens to Listen the First Time

Paul Sunseri, author of "Gentle Parenting Reimagined," shares strategies for fostering respectful and productive communication with teenagers, focusing on maintaining calm authority and handling defiance with effective behavior change techniques.

Sponsored by Equip: Eating disorder treatment that works—delivered at home. Visit equip.health/talking for more information, and a free consultation.


Full Show Notes

Parenting teens often feels like a constant negotiation, where requests are met with pushback, homework remains unfinished, and bedtime mysteriously shifts later and later. As a parent, you might find yourself repeating the same requests over and over, only to engage in a frustrating dance of argumentation that doesn’t end until you’re both worn out. The challenge is getting teens to engage respectfully and follow through the first time--all without nagging or raising your voice.

Traditional approaches may no longer work as our teens become more independent and begin to test boundaries like never before. However, it’s crucial to establish a balance between gentle connection and firm guidance to effectively communicate and set limits. How can we aspire to keep our cool while managing the everyday defiance?

This week's podcast guest, Paul Sunseri, is here to help us find that harmony. Paul is a clinical psychologist, father of four, and author of "Gentle Parenting Reimagined". With over 40 years of experience working with children and adolescents with serious mental health conditions, he has developed Intensive Family Focused Therapy, specializing in behaviorally challenging youth. Paul’s extensive experience informs his book, where he combines behavioral strategies with gentle parenting practices to provide actionable advice for dealing with oppositional and defiant kids.

In our conversation, Paul describes how parents often feel outmatched by their teenager's ability to escalate arguments or throw them off course with "red herrings"--distracting statements meant to derail. Paul explains how to spot these diversions and prevent them from sidetracking you, maintaining focus on your original request with calm firmness.

Cultivating Effective Communication

For parents, mastering a calm and confident “vibe” is crucial. Paul highlights that barking orders often results in more resistance—a counterproductive cycle. Instead, he advocates for maintaining a matter-of-fact tone that sets clear expectations and consequence pathways without generating conflict.

This episode also explores transitioning from traditional commands to more collaborative asks. As kids mature, they respond better to peer-like respect and autonomy rather than dictatorial orders. Paul introduces a language restructuring strategy that can increase cooperation by treating teens as responsible individuals capable of managing their tasks—if they can be persuaded to see the personal benefits in doing so.

Dealing with Defiance

When kids push boundaries through disrespect or defiance, leveraging privileges effectively becomes essential. Paul shares his methodology of “pause, earn, and return” for reinforcing positive behavior without resorting to extended punishments devoid of redemption paths. These principles rest on the concept that privileges, particularly screen time, can be used as motivation to encourage desired behaviors.

Through tweaks like establishing daily privilege earning systems for challenging youths, parents are guided on instilling responsibility and routine, even in seemingly intractable scenarios like morning school readiness.

Reinforcing Limits with Love

Paul underscores the importance of reinforcing behavioral limits with affection, humor, and attentive engagement. A harmonious family dynamic, he claims, stems from a foundation of warmth, humor, and mutual respect—qualities that make turning away from negative conduct all the more desirable to teens.

In the Episode...

My conversation with Paul yields a wealth of wisdom for parents grappling with unruly teen behavior. Beyond the strategies discussed, Paul and I also touch upon:
  • How to handle anger and escalations effectively
  • The significance of raising expectations for teens' social and developmental growth
  • Using humor for reinforcement rather than conflict
  • Strategies for encouraging teenagers to take on responsibilities, like driver’s licenses or part-time jobs
For more, dive into Paul’s insightful guide on managing teen behavior at myifft.org, and keep developing productive and respectful communication with your teens. Don't forget to subscribe to Talking to Teens for more episodes full of valuable insights every week!


Sponsored by Equip: Eating disorder treatment that works—delivered at home. Visit equip.health/talking for more information, and a free consultation.

Creators and Guests

Andy Earle
Host
Andy Earle
Host of the Talking to Teens Podcast and founder of Write It Great
Ep 327: Getting Teens to Listen the First Time
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