Parenting a Troubled Teen With Your Ex

Parenting Troubled Teen

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 who are no longer in a relationship but need to co-parent, the added stress of a troubled teen can is amplified by the existing strain between parents.

How then can you best parent your teen, make the right decisions for him, and stay on the same page as a parent while keeping things civil? What if things are further complicated by your teen taking a manipulative approach with his behavior?

Getting on the same page as your ex

Do you and your ex share the same views about your approach to parenting? In an ideal world, you’d be united and in total agreement regarding parenting your children. But, there are bound to be conflicts, arguments, and frustrations on both sides. This poses more than one issue regarding parenting a troubled teen. Your teen may recognize the strife between the two of you and use it to his advantage by lying and being manipulative.

Consider the teen who spends his weekends with his other parent. He may lie, use deceitful tactics, and try to manipulate your ex into doing things the way that he wants. This could include being untruthful about schoolwork that needs to be finished over the weekend, telling lies about any restrictions he’s under for his poor behavior, or simply embellishing a tale about how you treated him or spoke to him during an argument.

What can you do to address any concerns and ensure that both parents are on the same page regarding how your teen should be treated in each home?

To successfully co-parent your teen, you will need to set aside any anger, hurt, or resentment you have regarding your relationship with your ex. All of this should take a back seat to the more critical needs of your teen. This can be one of the most challenging parts of learning to work well with your ex, but it can also prove to be the most important.

Remember that co-parenting doesn’t have anything to do with your feelings or the feelings your ex may have. Instead, it is about your teen’s stability, happiness, and well-being.

  • Keep your feelings apart from your behaviors and actions. It’s normal and expected to harbor anger or hurt when it comes to your ex. But your emotions do not need to dictate your actions and behaviors. Your motivation should be to do what is best for your teen.
  • Don’t vent your feelings or anger to your teen. Your therapist, close friends, and family should instead be the ones you speak to about negative emotions.
  • Remain focused on your children, even your troubled teens. When your anger or resentment begins to rise, try to focus on why you should be acting with grace and purpose. Your teen should be your focus.
  • Don’t use your teens as messengers when you want or need to convey a message to your ex.
  • Keep issues with your ex between you and them. Your teen shouldn’t be made to feel like he needs to choose between his parents.

Parenting your teen should include a significant amount of consistency. The household rules don’t need to be identical between your homes, but there must be an understanding of what each parent enforces under their roof.

Work on communication with your ex

Your relationship may have broken down due to communication issues, but now is not the time to let the past continue to influence your parenting. Positive communication with your ex is for the ultimate benefit of your teen’s well-being. If things are tense, keep in mind that you and your ex don’t always need to see each other in person. Email, texts, and phone calls can make communication easier. The goal should be to establish a conflict-free exchange with your co-parent.

  • Keep emotion out of your communication. Approach your communications with the same approach you’d take at work. You’re in the business of ensuring the best for your teens, so keep things neutral, respectful, and cordial.
  • Instead of making demands or issuing orders, consider phrasing things as a request to your co-parent. “You need to” could be changed to “Can we try?” or “Is it possible to…”
  • Be a good listener. Even if you disagree with what your ex is saying, you should be able to listen and understand their point of view.
  • Keep the focus of the conversation strictly on your teen.
  • Ask for input from your co-parent when it comes to making decisions in your teen’s best interest. This is a team effort.

If you can communicate and cooperate with your ex, it’ll be much easier to make the right decisions for your teen’s well-being. It will also be much easier to recognize when your teen is trying to manipulate one parent into doing things his way.

Getting your troubled teen help

If your teen is acting up when he’s with you and is perhaps being deceitful, manipulative, and telling outright lies, what recourse for action do you have? If you can communicate healthily and constructively, you and your ex may agree on the best ways to help your teen.
There are several options to get your teen the help he needs, including some of the following:

  • Individual therapy
  • Group therapy
  • Family therapy
  • Medication options
  • Boarding school

Other options may help your teen get his life back on track. The most important thing for you and your ex to remember is that this is about him and not about you and your anger or hurt.

Handling disagreements with your ex

Co-parenting your teen will involve a world of decisions you will have to make together, whether or not you enjoy each other’s company. If you can communicate and cooperate without arguing or losing your temper, decision-making will be much easier for everyone.

How do you handle things if you and your ex disagree? One parent may not be willing to send your teen to a boarding school. Can you send him on your own?

  • Discuss your thoughts about boarding school with your ex.
  • Consider bringing it up during family therapy sessions.
  • If you have primary custody and the legal right to make medical and educational decisions for your teen on your own, you could move forward with your plans. Keep in mind that you may face anger from your ex.
  • Consider mediation with your legal counsel. Be prepared to defend your point of view: boarding school can offer significant benefits for a teen in crisis.

Get help finding the resources you need to get your troubled teen back on a healthy path. When you reach out you HelpYourTeenNow you’ll be able to connect with a compassionate team that can help you find the right type of help for your teen and your family.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

18 May, 2022

Recent Posts

A Residential Treatment Center Is No Reason to Panic

Often parents have to make difficult decisions that are in the best interest of their children. You’ve decided that the only way to get your teen the help they need is to place them in a residential treatment center. But once you make that decision, you are faced with...

Military School for Troubled Teens: Expectations VS Reality

Military school is often the first thing people think of as a solution for a teen who is rebellious, belligerent, and disrespectful. They picture a drill instructor yelling at a surly teenager until the teen finally changes his ways and becomes a better person....

How Teens Struggle Through Parent’s Divorce

Divorce is difficult for everyone in the family, but how does it affect your teen? Most teens are unaware of how to deal with these changes and may act out in different ways from shutting down to acting out. If your teen is having difficulty comprehending how to deal...

8 Fun Hobbies That Keep Your Teenager Engaged

It is alarming how many teens claim boredom as their reason behind substance abuse, shoplifting, and other dangerous behaviors. While boredom isn't the whole story—many troubled teens also struggle with their mental health, which requires therapy to manage—addressing...

6 Things You Can Say That Will Change Your Teen’s Life

What parents say to their teenagers can have a massive impact on their lives. The old adage, "Stick and stones may break my bones, but words will never harm me" doesn't apply when it comes to parents speaking to their teens. Even when angry with their parents, teens...

7 Bad Habits Your Teenager May Be Engaging In

Most humans are creatures of habit. Establishing healthy habits early in life eliminates the possibility of having bad habits as an adult, and greatly reduces the risk of bad habits turning into more serious issues. However, not all teenagers are aware when they are...

7 How to Be a Part of Your Teenager’s Digital Life

In their children's early years, parents often felt relief when their kids would be entertained by digital engagement since it meant chores, grocery shopping, and other things could get done. Yet, when it comes to teenagers, the endless absorption in digital life can...

Is My Teenager’s Behavior Normal?

It is natural for parents to seek assurance that their children are behaving normally or as expected for their age group. Likely, it is a holdover from closely watching infants and young children to ensure they were hitting developmental milestones. And for parents of...

How Soon Can My Son Come Back From A Residential Treatment Center?

One of the top questions parents ask when considering a residential treatment center for their teenage son is how long does their teen need to attend. However, that isn't an easy question to answer. In general, we here at Help Your Teen Now can tell you the ballpark...

Coronavirus: Is My Teenager Safe To Go To A Resident Care Center?

As public schools close and move students to online settings due to coronavirus, there are growing concerns that this means young children and teens are at risk of coronavirus. Along with these concerns, parents of troubled teens have reached out to us here at Help...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

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