Advice to Teenagers Part 2: Getting through Living at Home

Date Posted: November 11th, 2009

Your teenage years are a very weird time. You’re physically able to take care of yourself, but society all but mandates that you live with your parents. High school is mandatory. You don’t have the credentials to get a well paying job. You have no credit. You’re stuck. Functionally you’re mostly an adult, but you’re living under your parents’ rules. If you’re blessed with understanding parents your time in high school might not be that bad, but there’s no way to guarantee that. And even well meaning parents can have a hard time understanding that you’re almost an adult.

So what do you do if you have parents who are making your life miserable? Here are a few suggestions:

Act Like You’re Self Sufficient
Start doing the things you would be doing if you were living on your own. Do your own laundry. Fix your own breakfast. Wash the dishes. Clean the bathroom. Do these things independent of whether or not your parents ask you to. If you have a co-dependent relationship with your parents (i.e. you make your decisions based on how your parents will react), this is an excellent practice tool for working toward acting independently of them.

In addition you’ll get several other benefits from doing this:

  • A feeling of power Honestly, as much doing household chores is a pain, doing them freely really does make you feel like you’re an adult. You are using your ability to take care of yourself. When someone tells you you’re incapable of taking care of yourself, you’ll know that in fundamental way you indeed are capable.
  • You improve your quality of life a bit. A cleaner room is a nicer room. The food you cook is of as high a quality as you can make it.
  • Your parental units may start seeing you as more of an adult. And not just any kind of adult: a responsible adult. The more responsible you are in their eyes the more privileges you get. (Usually) All parents are different, so I can’t guarantee this will be the outcome for you, but I can say that there’s virtually no chance that taking care of the house will hurt your credibility.

Even if you’re planning to leave your room a mess, never do your own laundry, and leave the dishes in the sink for weeks when you actually do get to live on your own, I’d highly advise you to consider becoming the kind of person who’s tidy all the time. Ask yourself if part of the reason you’re a slob is just to piss off your parents. If that’s the case, you’re being co-dependent. You’re better than that.

Follow Your Conscience
Adults are perfectly capable of giving you advice and then going about acting irresponsibly. Sometimes ideas you know are right will be shot down by people who are older than you. They’ll tell you you haven’t lived, that there’s no way for you to understand until you’re older. If you’re getting this response, it’s unreasonable.

I’m 24 now. I’ve had a fair amount of life experience compared to my high school self. There’s only a handful of things I don’t think I’d have understood prior to experiencing them, and those weren’t the things I got into arguments about.

I spent a fair amount of time in high school angsting about my lack of experience. Looking back, it was wasted time and energy. I’d have done a lot better to trust myself and fall once in a while than feel bad that I could convince the authority figures (and myself) that I was right. Alas.

Get your advice from people with real experience
Related to the last point, many adults will have no problem giving you advice which they’d never consider giving their peers. They’ll tell you about investing when they’re buried in debt. They’ll tell you about how to deal with your significant other when they’ve been divorced three times and had two affairs. It’s unwise to take advice from someone when the subject of the advice is an area in which the person continues to fail. Don’t call them on this though. More likely than not they’ll attack you for it.

Instead get your advice from people who have reached the goals you want to reach. Ask someone who appears to have a good relationship about how to deal with your significant other. Ask someone who owns a business about what it’s like to start one. Etc.

Don’t complain
This will get you a lot of the way toward a good experience in high school. Whining doesn’t win you anything, and even when it does it comes at a price. You aren’t respected. You’re seen for the dependent child that you are.

Instead, acknowledge your situation, and try to find ways to work within it. If there’s injustice, accept it. It’s really hard to convince parents that they’re favoring one of your siblings, no matter how obvious it is to an outside observer. Same thing with a parenting decision. It’s not worth fighting since you do not have real power. The faster you accept it, the less hurt gets into your heart. Take heart that the situation is temporary.

Acting independently will help you in this endeavor.

Be Judicious in Your Openness
This is entirely dependent on who your parents are. There are some that will actually help you be your own person, who will reward openness with helping you think through the problem. If you have one of those, feel free to be fairly open with them. Let them know what you’re doing, what your beliefs are, what you aspire to do. They’ll help you get there.

If your parents are still believe they can “mold” you into their version of the ideal you, your openness will not be greeted with happy things. The best advice here is to give them only what they can handle hearing. If every time you talk about your dreams of traveling you’re dreams are shot down, don’t talk about it. They haven’t earned the right to your openness. Find other people to share it with. Lots of people, less attached than your parents, will be able to support what you want to do.

In short, they aren’t entitled to your openness just because they’re your parents.

Like the post on getting through high school, if I’d done these things while I was a teenager my life would have been a lot more pleasant. Such is life. Don’t repeat my mistakes.

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Fear of Success

Date Posted: October 19th, 2009

A common mental block I run into when making some change in my life is a fear of success. What will happen if I succeed? And more specifically, will I be OK with the person I become if I succeed. I’m a cautious person. I don’t want to have to spend time repairing relationships or credit scores or anything else. Thus many times, rather than jump in head first, I’ll subconsciously stop myself from succeeding.

Does this sound familiar? Are you afraid of what people will think of you if you actually lose weight? Or more importantly, what you will think of you? Does that mean you’re the kind of person that’s focused more on physical appearance than inner beauty? Does that mean you’ll have to sacrifice something that’s important to you in order to make the time to eat well and exercise? Does that mean you’ll be the kind of person that sacrifices spiritual things for the physical?

Or what if you’ve always wanted to be an artist or an actor or a comedian? That culture has a reputation for promiscuity, ungodliness, and other not so wonderful traits. Does that mean you’ll have to develop those traits? Do you want to be that kind of person? Do you want to be thought of being that kind of person?

Or what about money? What if you were rich? How would you feel about being a wealthy person? What would that say about you? Is it something you want to be? Is it something you’re OK with being?

All of these things are fears of success, or more accurately fear of the kind of person you’ll become if you succeed.

There are a few ways you can tackle the problem depending on both your faith in your decision and your faith in your ability to deal with problems if it was the wrong decision.

Superman You have strong faith in your ability to fix problems associated with your change if they arise.

If you’re in this category, it doesn’t really matter how much you believe in your decision. Just dive in and see what happens. No matter how much of a hole you dig you’ll learn a lot, and you can climb your way out afterward if it’s not really where you want to go.

If you’re in this category, you probably don’t really have this fear of success thing either. ;)

“Compass say that’s the right direction, but the clouds are ominous” You’re fairly certain this is the right direction for you, but you’re a bit scared about what it means to be that kind of person. An example is the would-be artist who’s afraid of being the sinful person he envisions all artists to be.

There’s a few things you can do to ease this block:

  • Identifiy what scares you Is it that you’ll be a bad person? That you won’t have time for what’s important? That you’ll have to drop all of your friends and family?
  • Visualize yourself having your cake and eating it too Figure out how you can do the new thing, be the new person and still do what’s important to you.If you’re trying to stay your pious self, maybe while you’re pursing your art and getting to know artist type people you also spend extra time at Church or with people who keep you honest and good. Maybe find someone to talk to about the challenges you’re facing, someone who can honestly assure you when you’re still on the right track or who can warn you when you start veering off.
  • Do it When your safeties are in place, start taking action to achieve your goal. If you’ve thought of everything, you should be able to make progress without your subconscious nagging you. And if you notice you still have the nagging feeling, figure out what it is and tackle it. Eventually you’ll weed all these issues out.

“My compass is broken” You aren’t even sure why you’re considering this goal.

This is deserving of its own post, but the short answer is:

  1. Figure out what’s important to you and where you want to go with your life
  2. Figure out what appeals to you about this goal
  3. Do those thing fit together?

If you can answer “yes” to question 3, then your compass isn’t the issue. Move on to the “Ominous Clouds” section.

Chances are you fall into one of these three categories. Hopefully this advice will give you some insight on how to deal what you’re facing.

At some point I’ll expand on the “broken compass” category, since a functioning inner compass is useful and not all that trivial to set up.

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Posted at 10:10 am | No Comments »

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