Stop Pushing Your Teen and Start This Instead (They'll Thank You Later) Podcast Por  arte de portada

Stop Pushing Your Teen and Start This Instead (They'll Thank You Later)

Stop Pushing Your Teen and Start This Instead (They'll Thank You Later)

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo
🎯 WHAT'S INSIDE THIS EPISODE Here's the hard truth nobody wants to hear: You can't motivate your teenager. And every time you try, you're probably making it worse. In Part 2 of this powerful conversation with holistic therapist Keri Cooper, we're diving into the counterintuitive strategies that actually work with teens—and why the "helpful" things you're doing might be sabotaging their success. This episode is about letting go, stepping back, and trusting that you've raised your teen well enough to figure it out. Spoiler alert: It's terrifying, but it works. 🎧 IN THIS EPISODE: Why you literally cannot motivate your teenager (and the ways you're accidentally unmotivating them) [00:00]The sports burnout epidemic: When years of training lead to "I don't want this anymore" [01:00] How to help screen-addicted teens rediscover what they actually enjoy [03:00] The passion-killer mistake parents make (and how to support hobbies without pressure) [04:00] Why parental role modeling matters more than advice ever will [05:00] The truth about teen brain development: It's messy, and that's exactly how it should be [06:00]How to foster independence by NOT solving all their problems [06:00] The grade reality check: If you're doing the work, they're not earning those A's [07:00]The mom who stepped away and watched her teen go from struggling to As and Bs [08:00] Why intrinsic motivation can't be forced (and when it actually kicks in) [09:00] The disappearing family dinner—and why this ONE habit predicts drug use, mental health, and grades [13:00]The picky eating epidemic and why your teen needs to try new foods NOW [14:00] 😰 WHY THIS MATTERS TO YOU Let me guess: You're texting your teen exactly what to say when they have friend drama. You're checking their grades online daily. You're emailing their teachers about assignments. You're micromanaging their schedule. You're constantly asking "Did you do your homework? Do you have a test tomorrow?" And it's not working. They're either completely unmotivated, or they're stressed beyond belief, or they've started lying to you just to get you off their back. Sound familiar? Here's what's happening: Every time you swoop in to help, you're sending the message that they can't handle it. You're stealing their ownership. You're taking away the very failures they need to learn how to pick themselves back up. And when they get to college? Your phone is going to ring in December because they're failing everything. Because those A's they got in high school? Those were YOUR A's, not theirs. This episode is going to make you uncomfortable. Keri Cooper doesn't sugarcoat it. But if you want a teen who's actually prepared for adulthood, who has intrinsic motivation, who can handle failure and bounce back—you need to hear this. ✨ KEY TAKEAWAYS You cannot motivate your teenager. Period. External rewards don't work. Research proves it. You can tell them all the ways they're unmotivating themselves, but you cannot create motivation for them. It has to come from within. The grades they're getting might not be theirs. If you're checking their homework, emailing teachers, managing their schedule—those A's belong to you. When they get to college without you, they'll fail. Better to let them get C's in high school while learning how to succeed on their own. Stepping back actually helps them step up. One mom stopped nagging about homework completely. Her teen went from struggling to As and Bs because they finally felt ownership. No one to blame but themselves—that's powerful. Passion dies under pressure. If your teen picks up baking or woodworking, don't ask "Did you do that today?" Don't make it a job. Ask questions about it, show interest, but don't turn it into another thing on their to-do list. Model what you want to see. Want your teen to have hobbies? Pursue your own passion. Want them off screens? Put down your phone. Want them to try new foods? Stop catering to picky eating. They're watching everything you do. Intrinsic motivation doesn't always kick in during high school—and that's okay. Sometimes it happens in college. Sometimes later. If you don't force it, they'll get there on their own timeline. Forced motivation isn't real motivation. Family dinners are non-negotiable. Research shows: more family dinners = less drug use, better mental health, better grades, healthier eating habits. Even once a week makes a difference. Stop saying you're too busy and make it happen. Life skills are disappearing. Your 16-year-old should know how to turn on an oven, sew a button, make a simple meal. These aren't optional—they're essential. And picky eating? It's going to be a problem when they can't eat anything but chicken fingers at a work dinner. Teen brains are messy—embrace it. Their development is supposed to be chaotic. Stop trying to solve all their problems. When they text you asking what to say to a friend, don't give them the answer. Ask: "What do YOU think you should...
Todavía no hay opiniones