Coping With Your Troubled Teen During the Holidays

Coping With Your Troubled Teen During the Holidays

The holidays are a time for family, gratitude, and goodwill towards all. Problem is, if you have a troubled teen in the house, you likely have a good deal of disruption already on your hands. It can make the approaching holidays more stressful as you try to figure out how to cope with your struggling teen.

Help Your Teen Now has worked with many families who have children attending a residential treatment center for troubled teens who come home for the holidays. Because of this, we wanted to share our advice on ways you can handle your troubled teens over the holiday season.

Be Prepared For Issues To Become Worse Over Holidays

Many adults struggle with their mental health over the holiday season, so it only makes sense that teens with mental health issues will often struggle over the holidays.

Some of the difficulty is due to the changes in the weather, less available sunlight, and the higher amount of sickness that happens over the winter. Also, as the people around your teen become more stressed about the holidays, it is likely that your teen will sense that stress, and it will feed into your teenager’s own struggles.

While you can’t control most of these factors, understanding the extra pressure your teen is under can help you remain more patient with them.

Set Ground Rules, Expectations, And Consequences

Before the whole family is plunged into reunions, holiday parties, and other celebrations, be sure that you lay out ground rules, expectations, and consequences for your troubled teen.

For example, say your family is traveling to your parents’ home to spend Thanksgiving weekend there. You may want to set clear rules about foul language and being polite to grandparents, and outline that rudeness and profanity will result in extra chores, removal of smartphone privileges, or other consequences you can enact while away from home.

Otherwise, if all the consequences take place later at home, your teen may decide that acting out is worth the risk. Also, with delayed consequences, sometimes teens may hope to wait for you to forget to enforce your edicts.

Being in a different place with a lot going on can throw off the best-behaved teen, so for your teenager who is already struggling, more guidance and structure is key to happier holidays.

Give Your Teen Safe Outlets

Even at troubled teen behavior modification programs, there is a certain amount of loosening up for the holidays. So, while you provide your troubled teen with structure this holiday season, be sure to build in some safe outlets for your teen to relax and unwind.

The holidays can be stressful for everyone, and without safe ways to relieve their stress, troubled teens are more likely to act out. Some safe outlets you may want to consider for your teen are:

  • Quiet time in their room – To help your teen avoid becoming overwhelmed, make spending quiet time in their room an option. You can set a reasonable time limit, such as 15-25 minutes in their room, then they have to come out for at least 45 minutes. That way, you can provide your teen with an acceptable escape while ensuring that your teen doesn’t spend the holidays in their room.
  • Have a friend or two over – For more introverted troubled teens, having lots of extended family members over during the holidays can be overwhelming. Allowing your teen to invite a friend or two over for at least part of the holiday vacation can go a long way to make your teen more comfortable and likely to behave to ensure their friend can stay.
  • Leave some free time for hangouts – It can be tempting to schedule the holidays to ensure that everyone is on the same page. However, it would be better if you left some free time for your teen to go and spend a few hours with their friends. Even if your family is out of town for the holidays, allowing your teen to go out with their cousins to a movie or another easy activity is a safe way to let your teen escape the hustle and bustle of the holidays.
  • Set up a code phrase – If your teen struggles with their emotional control, family holiday celebrations can be torturous. Rather than have your teen explode at a cousin or act out, set up a way for them to ask you to help defuse the situation with a code phrase. With your teen knowing that you are on their side and ready to help can help your teen keep their cool.

By considering these things before the holidays are in full swing, there is a higher likelihood that your whole family can enjoy the celebratory season together.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

25 Nov, 2019

Recent Posts

Recognizing When Your Teen Is Troubled

It’s no secret that the teenage years can be tumultuous for both parents and teens. There are common behavior changes and problems that most teenagers struggle with. But some deeper issues can indicate you have a troubled teen to contend with. Knowing the difference...

Does Pot Really Make Teens Dull?

The stereotype of the dull and dazed pot smoker is one seen across countless movies and television shows. But is there any evidence to support that the use of marijuana can dull the brain of a teenager? If your troubled teen is smoking pot, you may have several...

Hints Your Teen May Be Facing a Mental Disorder

As your child grows into the teen years, it’s normal to see a range of behavioral changes. Some of which can be troubling. It can prove challenging to determine whether this troubling behavior is simply a part of him growing into a young adult or whether this is a...

The Rights of a Parent of a Troubled Teen

As the parent of a troubled teen, you may be wondering just what level of decision-making responsibility your teen has over your parental decision-making rights. Teenagers begin to become more independent of their parents and create an identity separate from their...

What Problems Do Teens See Most Amongst Their Peers?

Even the most self-assured teen can find himself influenced in one way or another by the problems that their peers are faced with. Peer pressure is more than just something printed boldly on posters encouraging kids to avoid. It is not always bold, and it is not...

Lessons for Parents of Drug Abuse Teens

Being the parent of a troubled teen who is abusing drugs can be overwhelming, and it can come with a significant amount of guilt. You may feel guilt at how your teen is behaving. You may also feel guilt that your teen’s behavior could be due to something you’ve done...

My Teen Is Hiding In Their Room. Are They Alright?

When your teen was a toddler, you would have likely done almost anything to get just a few minutes to yourself. As the teen years approach, you may start to notice that your once very clingy little one is now spending less time around you and other members of the...

Set Aside Differences With Your Ex for Your Teen’s Sake

Whether your divorce took you by surprise, or it is the fresh start you've needed, it is going to have an impact on every member of your family. Children and teenagers can often bear the brunt of the emotional turmoil surrounding significant changes to the family...

Does Your Troubled Teens Addiction Run in the Family?

Did you get your eye color from your mother? Perhaps your hair and nose hail from your father’s side of the family? So many of our physical traits and behaviors can be due to our genetics. For some, there may be an increased propensity for addictive behaviors if there...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *