Helping a Manipulative Teenager Without Reinforcing Behavior

Helping a Manipulative Teenager Without Reinforcing Behavior

The teenage years can often feel like an ongoing struggle between parents and their teens, especially as older adolescents feel a greater need for independence. However, instead of being openly defiant or honest about desires for personal autonomy, some teens decide that behaving manipulatively is the way to get what they want.

If you have been dealing with a defiant teen and need insights on how to parent a manipulative teen without reinforcing their behavior, your parent advocates here at Help Your Teen Now are here to assist.

Manipulative Behavior Comes From Need For Control

Sometimes, parents can end up reacting to manipulative behavior without considering why their teen is being manipulative. But the main drive behind manipulation is a desire for control.

For instance, say your teenage daughter wants to borrow your car to go on a date. However, she isn’t sure if she asks for the car that she will be guaranteed to get it. So, instead, your teen decides to lie and say that she needs the car to go study with a friend at the library to get a treat once they are done.

If you try to ask more about the supposed study session or challenge your teen’s statement, she would continue to manipulate the situation by acting offended that you would ask more. Your daughter could even push the manipulation further by pretending to back down but talk about how her grades will suffer if she has to stay home.

While not all acts of manipulation include direct lies, when someone is being manipulative, there is an aspect of untruth, as events, words, and actions are skewed to serve the manipulator’s purpose.

Ways To Address And Defuse A Manipulative Teen

If you have been struggling with a manipulative teenager and aren’t sure what to do to help your teen without playing into the manipulation, here are some ways you can address and defuse your manipulative teen.

Address the manipulation as it happens

Your teen will opt for manipulation tactics for as long as they think it will work on you. By addressing the manipulation as it happens, you can show your teen that their preferred method of control will not work.

It is best to point out manipulation in how it impacts you—i.e., “It hurts that you are lying to me, rather than trusting me with the truth”—rather than accusing your teen—i.e., “I can tell you are lying, what are you hiding from me?”

Keep conversations and interactions on-topic

A manipulative teen will often try to drag in other subjects to argue on or take other routes to attack and derail the conversation you are having with them.

Rather than play into this tactic, you can simply keep the conversation on topic by saying something like, “That’s not what we are talking about right now. We can talk later about it, but for now, let’s discuss [insert issue].”

Disengage from the interaction if needed

Sometimes, you need to take a step back from interacting with your manipulative teen, particularly if they are being emotionally or verbally abusive or threatening you. For your safety and the health of your relationship with your teen, it is essential that you take the space you need if your teen has become too much.

Stay confident in yourself

Manipulators will often degrade their targets, eroding their self-esteem, and cause the other person to doubt themselves. Your teen may not be completely aware that they are purposefully trying to destroy your confidence, but that is often the result.

To prevent the erosion of your confidence, do your best not to take your teen’s harsh and manipulative words to heart. A therapist can help you with specific strategies that can apply to your situation.

Attend family therapy together

If you have been struggling to have conversations with your teen without blow-ups, temper tantrums, and other manipulative tactics, attending family therapy as a group can help. As a trained third-party, the family therapist can help facilitate more effective conversations and air issues appropriately.

Consider therapeutic boarding school

Even with your best efforts, sometimes teens need further intervention than their parents can provide at home. In these cases, attendance at a therapeutic boarding school can make a significant difference.

At a therapeutic boarding school for troubled teens, your teen can attend regular therapy in a wholesome environment designed to help teens overcome a variety of struggles. In this environment, your teen will learn more appropriate coping methods to gain personal control and independence that doesn’t rely on maladaptive behaviors.

For more information on therapeutic boarding schools and other troubled teen program options, you can always contact us either through our form fill, email, or by phone. We are ready to help you find the best option to help your teen overcome their troubling behavior and progress into a happy and successful young adult.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

22 Jan, 2020

Recent Posts

What Parents Need to Know About Bad Kids School

If you have a teen in crisis or is otherwise troubled, you may wonder if another educational or behavioral solution is the best option to help your teen. How much do you know about so-called bad kids’ school? It could be that your knowledge of them is exclusively...

Troubled Teen Problems: I Can’t Live With You Anymore!

The idea that you can no longer live with your teen and the poor behavior they consistently display. It’s not an easy or an overnight decision to come to. You’re sure to feel conflicting emotions, including guilt, sadness, confusion, and anger. What should your next...

My Teen Is Failing School, Now What?

It can often surprise some parents when they find out that their teens are failing school. Teens can be reluctant to share information about what they are struggling with until they have no other choice. Is your teen struggling at school? Have you found yourself...

Parenting a Troubled Teen With Your Ex

Parenting a teen can be challenging enough for parents who live together and have a strong positive relationship. If a teen faces troubles, pressure is added to the relationship. This pressure could stress and strain even the strongest of relationships. For parents...

The 5 Most Common Parenting Pitfalls to Avoid

There’s no doubt that parenting is a part of our lives filled with ups and downs. One day we may feel we’re doing great at parenting our kids. The next day we may feel we’re getting nothing wrong. What can you do to help be the best parent to your children? We’ve got...

My Teen is Struggling With Self Identity

It can be easy to dismiss the rollercoaster of emotions that your teen struggles with as a regular part of adolescent development. While it is undoubtedly true that the teen years see young people dealing with many aspects of their lives, some things should be a red...

Is Your Teen Manipulative?

No one enjoys being manipulated by their partner, friends, or coworkers. We often develop a keen sense of awareness of what manipulation may look like by those around us. But we also usually don’t think that manipulation could be coming from within our very own...

Why More Teens Are Struggling With Vaping More than Ever

Studies just a few years ago pointed to an alarming rise in the number of teens vaping. Today, those numbers continue to rise, even with new information about the health risks that can accompany vaping. As a parent, you may be wondering what steps you can take to keep...

What are the Most Common Problems Facing Teens in 2022?

It may not feel like it was that long ago that we were teens facing our own problems and dramas. Teen problems and all of the drama that can come along with middle school and high school can look pretty similar across the decades. But teens in 2022 face an entirely...

How to Help Your Kids Be Grateful In a Self-Obsessed World

In a world filled with social media apps featuring influencers and even the average person flaunting themselves and their lifestyles, it is easy to see how our teens can lose touch with what it means to be grateful and humble. It’s considered developmentally normal...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

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