Defiant Teen Behavior Lying and Stealing

Defiant Teen Behavior Lying and Stealing

Rarely do you meet a person who never tells a lie. Even the best of us may stretch the truth when serving our needs. Children and teens will often tell lies to get themselves out of trouble. It can become frustrating when a teen starts to act out, be defiant, and constantly lie.

Can you help your teen alter his path once he starts to go down the path of defiant behavior and more? What can you do? What should your first and next steps be?

What you need to know about defiant teen behavior

Before you can embark on a journey to help your teen work through his defiant, lying, stealing, and other types of negative behavior, it can be beneficial to learn more about unruly behavior in teens.

Defiance can come across as looking very much like disobedience or resistance to the rules of the household. Defiance can also be considered an exaggerated or extreme display of independence from the rest of the family. Your teen is trying to differentiate himself from you and the other family members.

It’s essential to recognize that a degree of rebellious attitude and behavior is considered developmentally normal. It can even be a healthy rite of passage for teens as they continue to figure out who they are.

It becomes a concern when defiance enters the picture and is now a far cry from the healthy rebellious teen attitude you should be seeing in your son or daughter. Defiance stems from a strong need to have control and power.

How can you tell if your teen’s level of defiance is becoming an issue? There are a few key indicators, including the following:

  • Struggling with friendships and relationships
  • Getting in trouble at school, whether due to poor choice, fighting, or refusing to study
  • Constant arguments with family
  • Going out without permission
  • Staying out late past curfew
  • Failing to learn from consequences or outright ignoring consequences

Defiance becomes a genuine concern for parents when it appears to be escalating, and the teen is not accepting or learning from consequences intended to help shift their behavior.

Working with your defiant teen

Any number of factors can cause defiance. A defiant teen will often push against his family because he’s afraid, in pain (mentally or emotionally), or feeling insecure. Your teen may feel a sense of powerlessness and that he isn’t being seen and heard.

Accompanying the defiance may be a fair amount of anger. The problem with anger is that it can further ostracize a teen who already feels like he is alone and unheard.
How can you work with an angry and defiant teen who will reject your consequences for his poor behavior?

  • Adjust your own behavior. You’ll need to work through your anger and frustration to get your teen to alter his defiant behavior and accept the love and support you’re offering. Get into therapy, and rely on your spouse and your support network. Give some thought to how you were as a teen. Were you defiant in your teen years? What caused it? How did you work through it?
  • Listen and learn. Understand. Perhaps the best antidote to your teen’s defiance is a stronger relationship. If a teen feels heard and understood, he will think his relationship with you is infused with trust. Feeling that level of trust can encourage your teen to pivot into a new direction that sees him altering his behavior.
  • Open up the path of communication. You can’t force your teen to engage with you. At best, you’ll be able to open up the communication path to encourage him to open up to you in his own time. If you create an environment where your teen feels comfortable speaking his mind, he may start to do just that.
  • Respond to him mindfully. If your teen is trying to bait you or get you embroiled in a power struggle, don’t respond to it. Instead, let him know that you hear him and acknowledge his feelings.

The goal is to understand what he’s feeling and dealing with. You may feel compelled to problem solve for him, but there are good odds that your defiant teen is not looking for you to solve his problems. He just wants to be heard and understood in a way that allows him to feel as though he has a level of power over his world.

Each one of us wants to know that we are understood. For a teen, this basic human need must be met so they can also feel that boost of confidence they need.

Holding your teen accountable for his behavior

With an understanding of what your teen is going through, you can adjust your sails to support your teen as he takes accountability for his behavior. Even if you understand why he is acting out and being defiant, this does not excuse the behavior itself. He will need to take accountability for his behaviors until he has corrected these same behaviors.

There are a few different ways to approach accountability.

Setting boundaries

This may have been unsuccessful in the past, but there may be different ways that you can approach it. Could you limit the time he spends using devices? Could he perhaps lose other privileges?

It could be that he gets an earlier curfew and is limited in his time with his friends. Teens often need boundaries to understand what is and isn’t appropriate behavior. By limiting his independence, you’re allowing him the required time and space to consider how his behaviors have negatively influenced other areas of his life.

Providing support

Support can take on many forms. It can mean routine check-ins with your teen, working with a mentor they have formed a connection with, going to therapy, and participating in fun and positive family activities.

Keep in mind that quite often, defiance does stem from a place of feeling powerless and not feeling heard and seen. Healthy activities that reinforce your teen is heard, seen, and supported can help immensely. It can also gradually help your teen get to the point where they take ownership for their behavior and poor decisions.

Are you looking for the correct type of resources to help with your teen’s defiant behavior? At HelpYourTeenNow, we offer the necessary resources to find the treatment options for poor or defiant behavior.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

11 Jul, 2022

Recent Posts

What Are The Best Programs for Troubled Teens?

If you have a troubled teen or a teen otherwise in crisis, it may have been suggested that you consider a therapeutic boarding school or a residential treatment center. While you know your teen needs more help and better therapeutic options, you may hesitate to...

Is My Teenager Gaslighting?

Does it sometimes feel like your teenager is making you doubt yourself, doubt the things you’ve said, and even feel confused about what you have or haven’t said? If you’re confused just by trying to figure it out, there are good odds that your teenager is gaslighting...

10 Fall Activities To Do With Your Teen

The holidays will be here before we know it - and now is the perfect time to reconnect with your teen before the hustle and bustle of the winter season arrives. Not only can you show your teen that you’re available to them for time outside of work and school, but you...

Help! My Teen is Sexually Active.

It’s the conversation many of us have been dreading for years: Talking to your sexually active teens about what they are doing, how they need to be safe, and how to recognize red flags in their sexually active life. As much as we’d like to simply bury our heads and...

Conflict Resolution for Teens

Conflict can be stressful no matter how old you are. Unfortunately, conflict is just part of life. Teens can feel conflict to be very personal and even scary, leading to behaviors that are not optimal for dealing with this stress. Teens also are more likely to be...

How Do I Control My Anger as A Teenager?

Your teen years are filled with rollercoasters of emotions, confusion, frustration, and so much more. Parents may say that the teen years are challenging for them, but it could just be that they’ve forgotten just how it feels to be a teen. And indeed, parents today...

Troubled Teen Stressing My Family Life

Is your teen acting out, getting into trouble, making poor decisions, and causing stress for everyone in the family? When the actions and behaviors of just one person in the family start to become the focal point for everyone, it can lead to a rapid rise in stress for...

My Teen is a Liar!

If you’re raising a teen, there might have been times that you caught your teen lying to you. All kids can be caught lying from time to time. But what do you do if you are dealing with a kid who lies all the time? It can feel frustrating and cause parents great worry...

Is Self Harming Always a Concern?

How much do you know about self-harm? If you have a personal history of self-harming, then it’s likely that you look for signs of it in your teen. If your knowledge of it is exclusively limited to what you’ve seen on the big screen or in the media, you may have a few...

Great Ways to Help Your Teen Save Money

Did your parents teach you about saving money when you were younger? Like most of us, you had to learn some valuable financial lessons the very difficult. Fortunately for your teen, he can benefit from your hard-earned lessons and know how he can save money for big...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

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