This book makes a significant demand on you. It requires a shift in how you view your situation, from “My teenager has a problem” to “I have a problem.” Though the objective of this book is helping your oppositional teenager become as independent, happy, and successful as possible, the subject of the book is really you. You, as parent, must initiate and sustain a change process.
Parenting an oppositional teenager is an extraordinarily difficult task, and most parents struggle with it. They find themselves getting angry, threatening, attempting to punish (often unsuccessfully), avoiding and ignoring, and ultimately giving up. Some blame schools and the media, some drink or take drugs, some cry, some leave their family. Some pretend a problem doesn’t exist. Some make excuses for their teenager. Some take theirs to a therapist and say, “Please fix her (or him).” Some do not know what to do and as a result do nothing.
Most parents do not do enough to help their teenagers during this crucial period and end up paying for it later. Instead of the independent, happy, and successful young adult we all hope for, they have a 20-year-old living with them who is dependent, unhappy, and unsuccessful. In other words, right where they were in high school and no school system anymore to provide teenage daycare.
Most parents do not understand their teenagers. Most parents don’t understand themselves. They lack knowledge of the options and services available to them. They lack strategies for addressing their teenager’s needs. This book tackles these issues.