How To Properly Handle When Your Teen Gives You Disrespectful Back Talk

How To Properly Handle When Your Teen Gives You Disrespectful Back Talk

If you’re a parent of a teen, then you’ve most likely had your teen talk back to you at some point in your relationship. But if your teen keeps talking back to you and on a more frequent basis, then you might be wondering, “why do they keep talking back to me?” and “what do I do?”

This article will help you understand why teens might talk back. It will also provide you with some tips on handling when your teen talks back in a disrespectful way.

If your teen continues to act out and is threatening to you and your family, consider getting help from a team of mental and behavioral health professionals.

Why troubled teens talk back (in a disrespectful tone)

Troubled teens may talkback for a variety of reasons. Here are just some of the reasons that teens might talk back and disrespectfully.

Your troubled teen feels misunderstood

Troubled teens often talk back when they feel misunderstood. For example, if your teen talks a lot about being bored, empty, or feeling like “there’s nothing to do,” especially with the pandemic going on right now, then you might ask them follow-up questions.

Questions like, “what’s making you feel so bored” or “what can we do so that you don’t feel this way” can be great conversation starters to helping your teen understand that you do care about them. It also makes your teen feel like you care to find out how they’re feeling.

You and your teen are vying for power or control

Sometimes, parents and teens can create a power-struggle when there need not be one. For instance, talking to your teen about the chores that need to get done can empower activity rather than a demand if you set the right tone.

The best way to set the right tone is by engaging in chores that need to be done. What this means is that you’re modeling for them what you would like to see them do. You’re not just telling them what to do.

You’re focusing on your teen’s negative behaviors

When your teen feels like you’re harping their negative behaviors, they may engage in those behaviors more. For one, your teen might not be aware of any positive behaviors they do since you’re only focusing on the negatives. Another reason may be because some attention is better than no attention.

Simple things like praising them for doing their chores or doing something that you’re happy with can help your teen understand what you expect from them. It can also build a stronger bond between you and your teen.

Your troubled teen may act out because of substance abuse or mental illness

Substance abuse or mental illness is also an underlying cause of teens acting out. Teens who struggle with substances like marijuana or prescription drug abuse might feel more irritable and agitated. Understanding if there’s an underlying substance abuse factor is important to helping your teen.

Likewise, your teen might have an underlying mental illness like borderline personality disorder or a neurodevelopmental disorder like autism that makes them feel irritable and misunderstood.

How To Help Your Teen Who Struggles With Talking Back

There are many ways you can help your teen who struggles with talking back in a disrespectful way. Some of the tips below are strategies used by mental and behavioral health professionals to help teens who are disrespectful and sometimes threatening.

1. Talk to your teen about boundaries

Sometimes, your troubled teen might not be aware of your boundaries. By communicating with your teen about what matters to you, you help them understand what you expect from them. For instance, you might communicate boundaries related to social media, privacy, and academics.

This might look like telling your teen, “for me, it’s very important that you pass your classes with a B or higher. If you feel like you aren’t able to do this, then let me know early on rather than seeing your report card showing otherwise.”

As you communicate your boundaries, allow your teen to express their needs and wishes. Encourage your teen to be honest with you. For instance, if they tell you, “I struggle with math, dad, so I don’t think that I can get a B.” Then talk to them about the options they have to reach the expectations that you have for them. The goal of having a conversation about boundaries is to make expectations more transparent for you and your family.

Since the focus is on disrespectful back talk, consider communicating clear expectations for communication etiquette. For instance, “you may not use any expletives if you’re upset.”

2. Stick to your boundaries

Once you’ve set boundaries with your teen and the rest of your family, then remain firm in your boundaries. Many researchers have found that teens tend to thrive in environments where there are routines and structure.

In the book, Fostering Resilient Learners, therapist Kristin Souers and principal Pete Hall describe how having familiar routines and behavioral reinforcements are important to teens.

So, if you’ve communicated your expectations for appropriate communication, then remain firm in having your teen follow through with that expectation (while recognizing that they’re human and might make mistakes!).

3. Have consequences

It’s very important to have consequences for boundary violations. For example, if they use an expletive, then have a consequence set in place for that behavior.

Make sure the consequence fits the boundary that being violated and are not extreme.

4. Reward positive behaviors

Finally, as we mentioned in the beginning, instead of focusing on behaviors that you don’t want, focus on behaviors you’d like to see more of in your teen. Reward them for things you do like completing chores, doing their homework, and doing their best.

The more you focus on positive behaviors, the more likely your teen will engage in those behaviors.

When you’ve tried everything and nothing is working

If you’ve tried these strategies and nothing’s working, then consider getting help from a team of behavioral and mental health professionals.

At Help Your Teen Now, we can help you find the right residential treatment center for you and your teen. At the center that you choose, with the help of professionals, you and your family will be able to address your teen acting out.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

18 Feb, 2021

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 *