how to talk to your teen girl so she will listen

Spread the love

how to talk to your teen girl

She longed to be a princess.

And in my eyes, she was

As a little girl, my daughter spent countless hours playing dress up and imagining she was Belle, Cinderella, Jasmine or one of the other magical characters from storybooks. 

It was a time that holds so many sweet memories. 

Fast forward about six years. Suddenly my “princess” is acting more like a pill. And I’m totally caught off guard by the transformation. 

Overnight, it seemed like “Mommy, what do you think?” was abruptly replaced with,  “I know, Mom! You’ve told me this stuff, like, 1,000 times already! Do I really have to hear another lecture?!”

What happened to the girl that wanted to hear my thoughts? The one who hugged me tight and loved nightly “tuck-ins” where we’d pray and giggle?

That girl liked me. This girl traded death stares with me. Her growing demands for independence and my growing desire to protect and control had frequently placed us on a collision course. Our clashes weren’t pretty. Sadly, we both often spoke to each other like adolescents. She was 12. I had to be the grownup.

So, one day I laid a journal on her bed and hoped for the best.

She didn’t want to hear my words, but maybe she would read them.

The first entry I wrote told her how much I loved her and wanted to communicate with her. Not with angry words that left us both feeling empty and hostile, but with words that expressed my heart.

Written words could be well-thought out, instead of spewed with heated emotion. They could be read and re-read when she was ready and open to “hearing’ what I had to say.

I had no idea how she’d respond.

Then, just before she went to bed that night, she gave me this: “Thanks for the journal, Mom. I think it’s a good idea.”

Really? I had a good idea? Maybe there was hope for us after all.

Over the past four years, a number of factors have improved our relationship — prayer and maturity (hers and mine!) — but the journal was a key component in opening her heart. And mine.

I’ve written many “lectures,” apologies and words of advice that I’d never have been able to finish if I’d verbalized them. Plus, they are there for all posterity. One day, she might dismiss them as the rantings of a mom who doesn’t “get it.” But maybe a year later, she’ll view them in a whole new light.

God is patient in this way with His children, too. He keeps speaking to us, even when our hearts are hard. Even when we don’t think He “gets” our longings and hardships. He waits for the day that we come to Him with our eyes opened to the wisdom we once lacked the perspective and maturity to embrace.

A while back, I wrote a long and heartfelt note in the journal. At the end of the day, I looked in her room and saw the journal in the exact same place I’d left it.

“So, are you going to read the journal?” I asked her, trying to act nonchalant.

“Yes, Mom. But sometimes I like to save it so I have something to look forward to.”

Now that’s something to write home about.

And I will give you a new heart, and I will put a new spirit in you. I will take out your stony, stubborn heart and give you a tender, responsive heart. Ezekiel 36:26 (NLT)

____________________________________________________ 

REGISTER NOW for the

2014 M.O.M. Conference ~ BETTER TOGETHER

July 31st – August 2nd,

Jacksonville, Florida at Trinity Baptist Church

BetterTogether728x90 copy

Registration InformationLocation, List of Breakout Sessions, Descriptions of WorkshopsConference Speaking TeamBetter Together Conference FlyerBetter Together Bulletin Insert (Full Color)Better Together Bulletin Insert (Black & White)Better Together Conference Cards (Postcard Size)

Stephanie Shott
Latest posts by Stephanie Shott (see all)
Share