12/4/94
ADOLESCENCE IS TOUGH BUT
YOU CAN MATURE THROUGH IT!
Remember your creator in the days of your youth, before the
days of trouble come, and the years draw near when you will
say, 'I have no pleasure in them' (Ecclesiastes 12:1)
Listen to your father who begot you, and do not despise your
mother when she is old. (Proverbs 23:22) Do not speak harshly
to an older man, but speak to him as to a father, to younger
men as brothers, to older women as mothers, to younger women
as sisters - with absolute purity. (1 Timothy 5:1-2)
I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, do not stir up or
awaken love until it is ready! (Song of Songs 8:4)
May you be made strong with all the strength that comes from
his glorious power, and may you be prepared to endure
everything with patience. (Colossians 1:11)
While your obedience is known to all, so that I rejoice over
you, I want you to be wise in what is good and guileless in
what is evil. (Romans 16:19) The fruit of the Spirit is
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity,
faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. There is no law
against such things. (Galatians 5:22-23)
Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature, and in divine and
human favor. (Luke 3:52) Let no one despise your youth, but
set the believers an example in speech and conduct, in love,
in faith, in purity. (1 Timothy 4:12)
We have had four marvelous teenagers: the youngest is in her
last year of this wonderfully complicated era. On their
thirteenth birthdays, at the beginning of this hazardous
journey, I would make a little speech, which they took with
good grace (I think!): 'Now listen. The next few years are
going to be all mixed-up: both for you and for us. Your
chemistry will go berserk, you'll have mood-swings like
you've never experienced, and there'll be phases when you
won't know whether you're a child or an adult or what. As I
said, these mood-swings are going to be hard for you and for
us, and I have just one request: please make 'em quick!'
In one sense, teenagers and their parents inhabit different
worlds. As Margaret Mead put it in 1972: 'Even very
recently, the elders could say, "You know, I have been young
but you have never been old", but today's young people can
reply "You have never been young in the world I am young in,
and you never can be".' [42]
Adolescence is when the Big Questions about one's identity
and significance come hurtling in upon us. We want the
security we experienced as children, but also the
independence we see adults enjoying. In most teenagers
there's a tendency to be lazy: we want the benefits of a
disciplined life without the effort (which is not possible).
Our changing bodies are a source of embarrassment. They don't
seem to develop in the right places evenly. And adults expect
us to be more mature than we are. We are constantly asking
questions about how we 'come across' to others; at no time in
our life is our self-consciousness as much an issue as in
these years. We often put ourselves down, and don't seem to
fit into situations (like high school after primary school)
as easily as before. Teenagers are easily embarrassed, and
therefore often teased (but teasers often lack confidence
themselves). There is a constant preoccupation with clothes,
and how we look (researchers tell us teenagers look into shop
mirrors more than anyone else).
A few pointers about bringing up parents. Let's take the
difficult curfew issue as an example. There's a good reason
why bumper stickers tell us 'It's 10 o'clock. Do you know
where your children are?' In the excellent book How to Raise
Parents: a Teenager's Survival Guide (Collins Dove, 1988, pp.
180-181) Sally rushes out of the door while 'Lunkhead' is
outside leaning on the horn. She asks Dad if she can stay out
an hour later tonight. Dad looks out of the window at
Lunkhead, still leaning on the horn, and immediately thinks
'Sex!' 'No', he yells in panic. So there's an argument.
Problem is, Sally's talking about time, Dad about sex. She
should have negotiated earlier, been explicit about where she
was going, and why she needed the extra hour. Parents,
believe it or not, have had more experience with the
Lunkheads of this world, and they have good reason to be
worried. Sally: after a track-record of responsibility
keeping pre-arranged curfew hours, you will be in an
excellent position to negotiate a new time.
In Western countries we are ready for 'making babies' and
parenthood about ten years before we marry. Most movies
dangle sexual enjoyment before us, and so it requires a lot
of maturity not to give ourselves away in this area before we
are ready for a serious commitment. A suggestion: always be
a little skeptical about the moral messages you're getting on
TV and in the movies. Michael Medved in his important book
Hollywood vs. America highlights many research reports
released by an array of scholars over the past several years
which offer some insights on the way that media messages
alter our perspective. For example, Dr. Jennings Bryant of
the University of Alabama declares that 'some of the most
durable and important effects of watching television come in
the form of subtle, incremental, cumulative changes in the
way we view the world.' These cumulative effects are
particularly potent for adolescents who are going through a
'turbulent time of life in which the very insecure people
struggle with their self-concepts and their values on a daily
basis... when values appear to be quite frail and very
malleable.' Dr. Bryant cites three carefully constructed
research studies which indicate that 'heavy exposure to
prime-time programming featuring sexual intimacy between
unmarried people can clearly result in altered moral
judgement.'[78] In chapter 20 we will discuss this issue more
fully.
The best wisdom about the 'mating game' may be summarized as
follows: Assume that decision-making about complex moral and
other issues is not easy until you are into your twenties.
Find a partner you'd be happy to put up with when he or she
is in a bad mood. Would this one be OK as mother/father of
your children? What kinds of traumas did they suffer in
their childhood? (You'll harvest these later: almost all
girls who were sexually abused, for example, have problems in
their married sex lives.) If you start 'going steady' be
steady on all fronts: mental, emotional, physical,
spiritual. Don't let one of these areas get ahead of the
rest.
Back to relating to imperfect parents. Two of the best things
I remember doing as a teenager were (1) sounding off about my
parents to a friend: I realize now I was getting a lot of
frustration out of my system. And (2) I remember, when about
15, saying to myself, 'My parents are narrow, square,
uninteresting etc. etc. but I'm not going to let their view
of the world affect me.' So I got on with life, taking the
best from my parents' culture and religious faith, and adding
it into a new mix of my own. I'm very glad I approached it
like that. Some older people - even into their thirties and
forties, have not forgiven their parents for being human.
It's one of the key marks of a mature person to do that -
hopefully before you're finished being a teenager.
Teenagers: you can create a hell in your home. Don't. If
you've got problems, find a sensitive adult to talk to. If
you need the words, phone them up, if you like, and say
something like this: 'I read in this book that I should talk
to someone about my problems with my parents. Can I talk to
you?' Go on, do it.
A final word about peer pressure. Teenagers aren't the only
group suffering from the tyranny of friends' expectations:
look at businessmen and politicians for example, they all
dress and behave the same as their peers. But as a teenager
you're not as sure of yourself as you will be when older, and
peer culture is replacing adult authority in some kids' lives
because it offers intimacy and belonging. It can be
tyrannical, but unlike the family it has no responsibility
for consequences, and is more concerned for 'now' rather than
longer-term effects. And it can be reactive: adults are down
on drugs, so your peer group will tell you drugs are O.K. -
parents just don't want you to have a good time. I hope you
give that kind of nonsense the treatment it deserves.
I forget who said it, but the following is the best wisdom
I've read on all this: 'The so-called "generation gap"
doesn't have to get in the way of your relationship with your
parents if you don't want it to. You can develop a mutual
understanding with your parents, different from the one you
have with your friends, but just as good if not better. Keep
the lines of communication open and use them.'
It's unusual for families with teenagers to eat together,
much less pray together. Families these days tend to graze.
If the teenager comes home from school and parents are still
out at work, they'll raid the 'fridge. Mum isn't there to
tell them not to eat because it will spoil their dinner.
Kids have more freedom, we all know that. But so has
everybody else. The nine-to-five working routine is going.
Kids have more things they can do, more movies they can
watch, more television. They have more money (yes), and more
freedom to get around.
The old disciplines are going. Kids have more options.
And yet they are more responsible and irresponsible, in some
ways. They drop more litter than previous generations (partly
because they have more wrappers to dispose of), but they also
have some good opinions about nuclear power, whales, and the
biosphere.
One study found that most Australian young people, when asked
the ideal characteristics in a partner, said they looked for
honesty, caring, trust, intimacy, stability and the ability
to communicate. Physical attractiveness was mentioned by 10
per cent of women and 30 per cent of men.
This same study found that basic values haven't changed very
much. Young people prize family values. They don't want the
family to die.
Rowland Croucher, from an unpublished talk.
Does life get easier as you get older? Yes. Adolescence and
puberty is a very stressful period. You are like a continent
being formed by volcanic eruptions and fires. There are calm
periods and then more eruptions. But despite all the stress,
a continent truly is being formed.
You face the stresses of your body changing and of trying to
identify who you are and what you want to be. You face the
stresses of learning to relate to the opposite sex and of
handling peer pressures about drugs, booze and sex. And all
the while you have pressures in school.
Later, of course , you will encounter different stresses,
because there's no such thing as life without stress. But
you'll be able to cope more maturely. You'll be more
realistic about yourself and the world.
But even so, it takes most people about forty years to
discover the map is not the territory. Aristotle, for
example, said it takes forty years to be a philosopher.
Thomas Aquinas, one of the great thinkers of the Middle Ages,
agreed.
What they meant was that as we gain experience dealing with
life and all kinds of people (not just the narrow world of
our family and friends), we learn to accept responsibility
for ourselves. At that point - about age forty - we begin to
take another look at our values. We begin to see that
reality may not be what we thought it was when we were
eighteen. Then, finally, we let go some of the baggage. We
learn grudges are useless and only harm us, that holding onto
anger gives us ulcers. We learn how to love more
unselfishly...
Just as once it was difficult for you to tie your shoes but
today it's a snap, by the time you're forty you'll
automatically be doing loving things for your family or
friends - things that you were too self-conscious to do when
you were sixteen or seventeen.
As you mature, you learn how your parents influenced who you
are. You begin to see how wise they were in some things. Mark
Twain said that when he was seventeen his father was the
stupidest man on earth; when he reached twenty-three, he was
astonished how much his father had learned in six years.
How to Raise Parents: A Teenager's Survival Kit, Blackburn,
Victoria: Collins Dove, 1988, pp. 218-219. [380]
Some people confuse adolescence and puberty, as if these
terms mean the same thing. They don't. Puberty begins between
the ages of nine and eleven, depending on whether you are a
boy or a girl, and ends around sixteen to eighteen. It's
basically a physical and hormonal process.
Your soft baby skin becomes thicker and more oily. That's why
about 70 percent of young people will have skin problems.
Your baby jaw will be moving forward to take its adult shape,
and this may temporarily affect your eardrums - and that
means the stereo gets played louder. Parents will yell, 'Are
you deaf?' and the answer, in puberty, is 'Yes, partially.'
Hair is thickening and growing in strange places. The word
puberty comes from the Latin pubescere, which means 'to get
hairy'. In fact, puberty is a very hairy time. At least seven
powerful hormones are being shot through your body, chiefly
testosterone in boys and estrogen in girls. These chemicals
cause dramatic emotional shifts - real highs and real lows.
Suicidal depression can be followed by a wonderfully
exhilarating mood. That's one reason it is particularly
stupid to take drugs at this time: your body is producing all
of its own mood-altering chemicals. Pubescents have natural
highs.
Keith Smith, How to Get Closer to your Children, Surrey
Hills, NSW, Australia: Waratah Press, 1985, pp.164-165. [198]
Adults and young people can feel as if they live in different
worlds from time to time. Society is changing so fast that
the life experience of one generation can be very different
from the next. Rock music, invented on washboards and
acoustic guitars, is now a sophisticated electronic
production. Work that once took a clerical worker's day now
takes a few seconds on a micro-computer.
Adults and young people are sometimes hostile to each other
because each feels threatened by the other. The enthusiasm
many young people have for challenging things adults take for
granted can be unsettling for those adults. It can appear to
be attacking the very things that make those adults secure.
By contrast, the young feel that they are powerless. That
they are surrounded by adults telling them what to do, how
things are, and generally getting in the way of young
people's freedom.
There is some truth in both these attitudes. But there are
also many things adults and young people have in common.
Adults' freedom and power to direct the course of their own
lives is not great in many cases. Young people's attitudes
are rarely as rash as some adults fear. Young and old
discover this as soon as they begin talking with each other.
Julie Warren, How to Handle Your Parents, Edinburgh:
Macdonald Publishers, 1983, p.51. [221]
The transmission of [the] message isn't magical or
mysterious: the power of the entertainment industry to
influence our actions flows from its ability to redefine what
constitutes normal behavior in this society. The popular
culture now consumes such a huge proportion of our time and
attention that it has assumed a dominant role in establishing
social conventions. The fantasy figures who entertain us on
our TV and movie screens, or who croon to us constantly from
our radios and CD players, take the lead in determining what
is considered hip, and what will be viewed as hopelessly
weird. In every society, ordinary folk have been able to
cultivate a sense of style by aping the airs of the
aristocracy; in this stubbornly democratic culture, the only
aristocracy that counts for anything is the world of
'celebrities' who appear on the tube and in the tabloids.
Michael Medved, Hollywood Vs. America, New York: Harper
Perennial, 1992, p.261. [145]
A Melbourne current affairs show recently reported on a new
'fad' sweeping some teen circles: chastity. According to the
report, virginity and abstinence until marriage is becoming a
new 'trend'. Imagine that: chastity is now up there on a par
with hula hoops and glue-sniffing. Modern society is
certainly progressing...
The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry (34,1993)
reports that when compared to peers from intact families,
adolescent children of divorced parents show higher rates of
problem behaviours, psychological distress, and academic
underachievement. Also, according to the study done by a
Medical School in London, parental remarriage does little to
allieviate these problems...
Teens are much less likely to leave home for life on the
streets if their parents' marriage is intact than if their
parents are divorced or never married. According to a
Canadian University study, a life of crime on the streets was
more likely if teens came from broken homes.
Australian Family Association, Family Update, Vol 9 No 5,
Sept-Oct 1993, p.8 (Permission to reprint from Bill
Muehlenberg, 582 Queensberry St, North Melbourne, 3051).
God is a God of love who comes to us, offering us the gift of
a new and meaningful life through Jesus Christ. This bold
declaration of faith is good news to a generation of young
people caught in a crossfire of mixed messages about their
sexuality:
From the clergy: 'Do not have sex until you are married.'
Parents: 'Do not have sex until you are really ready -
preferably not until you are married.'
Educators: 'Delay sex or consider abstinence, but if you do
have sex, use protection.'
Researchers: 'Most young people have sex by the time they
enter college... average age of intercourse... 15.'
Peers: 'What do you mean you slept with him! You're crazy!'
or 'What do you mean you are still a virgin?'
Magazine ads: 'If you wear these jeans, you can have your
pick of sexual partners.'
TV: 'If you are rich, you can have sex whenever and with
whomever you want.'
Movies: 'If you just relax and enjoy being swept off your
feet, you will have great sex and live happily ever
after.'
Fairy tales: 'The knight-in-shining-armor will swoop into
your life - no matter how bad your life seems now - and
carry you off to a castle in fairyland and you will
live happily ever after.'
Presbyterians and Human Sexuality 1991, Published by the
Office of the General Assembly Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.),
Lousiville, KY, p.43. [213]
Having to report to your parents on your day's encounters can
be a bit of a trial. The more your parents want to know, the
less you want to tell them. And so the plot thickens. If you
have this sort of problem with your parents, ask yourself
this question. 'Could it be that my parents are actually
genuinely interested in my life?' As the question- answer
routine has built up it may seem that the questions are more
important than your answers. Your parents may appear only to
want to pry into your affairs, or control you movements.
Usually, however, parents have more to do with their time
than to make idle enquiries of what you do with yours. They
ask because they are concerned that you do not come to harm
as you explore the world about you, just as they've alway
been. This concern extends to being interested in what you
find there and how it affects you. They can see you growing
and developing and want to keep in touch. For all these
reasons, and the simple fact that they are responsible for
you, your parents have a right to know where you are when
you're not at home and who you're with. What you tell them is
important. Try avoiding your parents' irritating questions
by getting in first with the information. For example, 'I'm
going to see so-and-so tonight, we're planning to go to
such-and-such a place. Do you know it? What time would you
like me home?' The questions at the end actually invite your
parents to share a bit in your plans without necessarily
restricting them.
Julie Warren, How to Handle Your Parents, Edinburgh:
MacDonald Publishers, 1983, pp.16-17. [269]
A teenager's prayer
Jesus, I don't pray much, perhaps, but now I'm needing to
talk to you, about me.
Jesus, I'm confused. I sometimes really don't know who I am.
Some of my relationships aren't working out. I'm trying to
figure out what kind of lifestyle I'm to follow and there are
so many alternatives.
Life is pretty difficult. I can't understand my parents
sometimes, school is hard, friends come and go, I don't like
myself very much, and I'm scared about the future. I know
unless I work hard I won't make it, but it seems a long
grind.
I want to be independent, but I also want to respect my
parents and I want my parents to respect me. If I make
mistakes help me learn from them, and if my parents are
critical of some things, help me remember they're mainly
trying to protect me and warn me because they care about me.
I don't know very much about how to be a Christian, but I
want to learn more. I want my questions answered. There are
big moral issues - smoking, drinking, drugs, sex - and I'm
torn between finding the truth, and having a good time and
keeping my friends. If something's right, I want to do that,
rather than wearing a mask and being a phony just to be
popular.
If I really choose to follow you, it's going to be hard at
school. Other kids don't easily accept people who are
different.
Jesus, when it's tough, help me make a stand, see me through
another day.
I give my life to you: take me as I am, and make me into a
worthwhile person. Forgive me for living without you. You
have a great plan for my life - help me to find it. I want
to make a difference in the world, and when I die, help me to
have lived well.
Amen.
A Benediction
May the God who made everything make you into a beautiful and
useful person. May Jesus who was the special friend of people
who were confused be your special friend too. And may his
Spirit live in your life and through your life so that other
people in our messed-up world can find the way. Amen.
top of page