Saturday, November 18, 2017

Strategies For Dealing With A Teenager Broken Heart

By Joshua Martin


As the parent of a teen, you may be well-versed in the emotional ups and downs that come with having one of these adolescents in your home. One day your teen is fine. The next day, he or she is raging and crying against the world. The ups and downs are part of the teenage years, and you will survive it just like your parents survived yours. Still, you may have no idea what to do the first time your child suffers a teenager broken heart. You can gain experience dealing with the temporary romantic crisis and turn the child's attention to other things in life by using these tips.

To start, it may be important for you as the adult to realize that you may not soothe the situation by bringing up the teen's good fortune. Your son or daughter will not care at that point in time that he or she has a house, food, a phone, clothing, and perhaps even a car. These luxuries pale in comparison to the pain of having someone they wanted to love them ultimately reject them.

Further, this attempt to gloss over the hurt does not address the underlying situation, which is rejection of their love interest. Being rejected is a major fear of most teens. At this age, they need to be accepted and if not loved at least admired by their peers. Rejection can be a deep wound to their psyche.

Indeed, they may even love the romantic interest more than they love you at least one a temporary basis. Your love for them is easy to take for granted because you are a constant in their life. They are not threatened that you will withdraw your love from them. As such, it takes a lesser role in the situation right now.

Therefore, as a parent your primary choice is to diver their attention away and force them to concentrate on something else. If your teenager does not have a job, you might require him or her to get one. A job forces your child to keep busy and prevents him or her from languishing in emotional purgatory in the bedroom.

Chores like raking, mowing, taking out the garbage, and other general cleaning can be good for the entire body and mind. Hard work pumps blood throughout the body and encourages the brain to create endorphins that induce feelings of happiness. In time, your daughter or son may start to act and feel normally again.

It would not be out of the question for you to reward them for doing the chores or working a job as asked. A trip to the local shopping mall for a new outfit or a visit to a nearby resort could soothe the pain if at least temporarily. Ultimately, your child will need to be guided toward objectifying the conflict and learning that the rejection is not his or her problem but the problem of the other person involved.

Teenagers who suffer emotional turmoils and hearts that are broken by rejection are not easy with which to live. It may be up to you as the parent to take control of the situation. These ideas could right the upheaval in your household and divert attention elsewhere.




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