I am having a hard time to deal with my teenager son. We've had several discussions at home recently, and I don't understand why he is so resistant to my advices. And this has been an equal challenge to my husband as well. His father has more patience than me, though. Since I am pregnant, I am trying to avoid confrontations, so my husband is dealing more directly with our son. However, today it got me thinking about my son's resistance even more because we had a discussion about one simple thing. He changed his homeschool time to mornings, knowing that afternoons are better for me to help him. He is very low in placement tests of math, when compared to kids in his age. He still needs to improve his writing and prosody. So I would like to help him closer, and I had explained that to him multiple times. My husband and I have plans for his SAT, TOEFL and college application. I wish Wagninho would trust us more. However, in the middle of our discussion I realized that we are having a power struggle. Our son is not willing to do anything that we ask him, if this means he will lose the power to decide or do things in his ways.
I tried to remember things I learned about adolescence in my online classes. However, knowing he is in this stage of autonomy and freedom, or that his brain and body are going through changes...these things don't help us to convince him to stop wasting his time playing videos games and be more dedicated to his studies, the gospel, seminary, being gentle with his sister and parents, and etc.
So I decided to ponder about what I did wrong in his childhood. Because I didn't have a challenging adolescent when Suzana, our oldest daughter, was going through these changes. She went through the same issues of autonomy/privacy/freedom/protection/identity and also the biological changes. But I remember being a source of help and comfort to her, whenever difficult she was having. So it reminded me that I didn't have the same relationship with my son when he was younger. He was always so difficult to deal with! I am not trying to excuse myself, but it was like he avoided me to strengthen our relationship. I had a hard time to understand him. I didn't know what to do. I read severeal books, watched several lives...implemented some practices that I thought would help, but...he countinued a distant child. I tried to be gentle, say good things to him, buy things he liked, encourage him in his extra activities, but at the same time I also disciplined him because I thought that was correct. I learned that parents need to give limits, showing authority while also demonstrating love. I also didn't control myself many times, causing several fights with him, while he was growing up. I remember I lost my temper a lot, I even beated him sometimes. Obviously I knew I was wrong, and apologized him. He was a very challenging child. Although we had very good moments, where I demonstrated my love for him, I have more memories of how challenging he was to obey simple things. Or even accept my advices/teachings. So I turned out concluding that maybe I wouldn't have the same strong relationship with all my children, like I had with my oldest daughter. Perhaps I needed to respect my son's personality. Perhaps he was not the kind that liked to bond like I expected. So I gave him the distance he seemed to want.
I was reflecting about all of this today. I think that somehow the struggle we're having with him now is a reflection of a lack of relationship I should have developed with him, while he was young. That would explain why my oldest daugther's adolescence was not challenging.
However, I also thought that I should not take the blame all on myself. Each person has a personality, and temperament, that I have no control over. He gets to decides how to act towards the experiences of life or how his parents are. What I mean is that my son could have decided by himself to accept his parents approaches since young age. If he had accepted my love and influence better, we would have bonded, and would have a good relationship to go through this stage he is dealing now.
I think each personality reacts differently with each life stage and experiences. I can't compare him with my oldest daughter or the yougest, or the baby girl that is coming now. Even though I don't agree with my son's reactions to our life's experiences (we moved a lot in the last few years...), this is the son I have now, and I need to learn how to deal with him. And I intend to give my best to understand him, and help him go through this challenging time.
So far, I think we should avoid power struggles, demanding things, and treat him like an adult. He has to suffer the consequences of not studying and instead playing video games. I don't know how I will be able to see him lost the opportunitties. But I will pray that somehow he will make sense of his life's choices in time to revert without much harsh consequences. When it comes to scriptures and seminary, I think I should let him sufffer the consequences as well, so he can learn by himself. Perhaps this approach is the same I chose when he was younger, when I gave him space. Perhaps, I should confront and not give up until he accepts that his parent's teachings.