|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
24 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
209 of 217 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Gentle reminder for common sense,
By ginnytheworkingmom (Bolingbrook IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
If you are looking at this book, my heart goes out to you. This book doeesn't offer much in the way of a guideline, although has some nice stories that will make you feel like you're not going crazy. My real advice to you, after years of counseling, books, and true anguish of a mother, is to keep it simple. If your teen is depressed or struggling, they are not ready to respond to adult logic or reasoning. (That is why you are arguing all the time!) They need your love and compassion, but they also need consistency and consequences commensurate with their choices of actions. Pick your "must have's"...for example, must have no surliness at dinner? (That's reasonable! Especially if you have younger kids!) Surly at dinner? No cell phone or IM-ing for the rest of the evening. Don't tell them "why", or give them the platitude of "we're trying to love you, to show you, to blah blah blah"...they TRULY DON'T CARE why. Instead, make a list of choices, and their consequences...and then consistently apply them without arguing (by the way, there is no answer to "why are you doing this to me?")...end the tears, arguments and discussions. Keep it simple...your teen has enough mind games, uncertainty, pressure, frustration and communication issues at school. You should be the place where they know how it will end up, which is support, love, conveniences of home, and they also know how their choices will affect those rewards! And finally, don't blame yourself. Your teens depression and angst is a result of much, much more than the decisions you made in the past. It is what it is, and give them consistency, no arguing, and love to get through what the present is, not the past. My prayers to you and your family.
228 of 257 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Authoritative parenting,
By "pete60563" (Naperville, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
I wrote this review for a college Psychology course.Edgette is a clinical psychologist who offers advice to parents whose parenting style can best be described as permissive or indulgent. In one way or another, these parents try "negotiating" with their teen when the child misbehaves, and thereby losing their authority and credibility. As a result, the relationship between parent and child worsens via a cycle of argument and mistrust. The parents want to grant freedom to their adolescent, but do not balance that with accountability. By letting their child get away with minor infractions, the pattern of misbehavior builds: the teen feels "independent" and refuses to listen to further attempts of the parents at discipline; the parents feel frustrated in having an uncontrollable teen, and give up control altogether.
37 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Finally- a parenting book that's Real,
By Carol Guhl (Syracuse, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
This book helps to FINALLY get the adult out of the same old cycles in fighting with their teen. I liked the fact that it does NOT encourage more manipulative behavior in order to regain control, but gets down to what's really going on. Parents - and teachers, too- can get invaluable guidance in restructuring conversations with their teens so that they mean something. I also like the fact that personal responsibilty and accountability is stressed, and placed where it belongs. The chapters on case histories were the most helpful to me, as they gave inventive- and sometimes funny-examples of how parents solved their long-time problems. Easy to read, and very engaging!
56 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must Have for All Parents!,
By DebLynn (Mahopac, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
This may be the most sensible, wise, clear and reader friendly book about parenting adolescents that I have read. Clearly the author not only cares about kids, but also knows how to help parents get untangled from the conflict and confusion of trying to understand and guide today's teens. Written with genuineness and humor, I can't imagine any parent not finding themselves between the pages, laughing and learning and coming out with more clarity and a saner family life! I work in a school district and we have included multiple copies for our parent resource library -- an invaluable addition.
27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Likable read- no direct skills,
By
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
I thought this book would offer more in the way to make changes in your home, instead it is a nice narrative of people who have been helped by the author. I prefer a direct "how to" approach, and this was not it - very disappointing. Gregory Bodenhammer has two books on this topic that are more direct, concise and to the point. I found that "Back in Control" and "Parent in Control" had a lot of useable information.
25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
That's my son you're talking about!,
By
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
On the advice of my best friend (to whom I have confided my child-rearing problems for over 25 years) I bought the book - Stop Negotiating With Your Teen:Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody or Depressed Adolescent. I did so because my teen/adult son (age 20) is all of the above. I really liked the author's writing style. She mixed real-life cases with some clear cut behavior advice as well as behavior styles the teen may use. Boy, was I surprised to learn that my son was manipulating me and that I was letting him. It was a big eye-opener for me. I heavily relied on parts of the book that I read and re-read that really applied to our situation. Each time we had an encounter I could then more clearly draw upon the author's experience and the behaviors she wanted to encourage - both my son's and mine. I can tell you it has made a difference. A particularly nasty exchange that would have left me totally defeated was instead turned into a real chance for communication because of what I learned in this book. I would highly recommend this to anyone regardless of the age or managability of your teen. I have already loaned the book to a good friend who has a teenage daughter with an anger problem and she found it so valuable. A very good resource!
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent resource for parents,
By Joseph P. Dowling (Philadelphia, PA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
I have found Janet Sasson Edgette's book, 'Stop Negotiating With Your Teen....', to be an invaluable tool for the parents of my adolescent clients. This book, I believe, is a MUST for ALL parents as it outlines a meaningful, candid, and guenuine syle of commuication between parents and teens.Parents of younger children will also be afforded an opportunity to establish an empowering way of being/communicating with their children from the learnings available in this work. The strategies discussed throughout this volume can be easily absorbed and thus implmented effectively. A stimulating and quick read, I highly recommend 'Stop Negotiating With Your Teen...'
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Empowerment and Respect,
By American Abroad (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
This book is fantastic. I have spent the last ten years learning how to raise a very, very difficult child/teen. Much of what I learned in expensive therapy and specialist programs is covered in Edgette's book - and more effectively than in any of the many, many other books I've read. Stop Negotiating with Your Teen is concise and easy to understand. Edgette has a thorough understanding of these kids and the challenges they present. She doesn't try and create a standardised perfect parent. Instead she offers a practical, common sense approach to parenting that empowers parents to parent as leaders. She also helps parents to help their difficult teen make better choices. Siblings and parents alike benefit from the ensuing changes. Everyone in the family wins.
14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Strategies, but a bit too Adversarial,
By David Nelson "Dave" (Santa Ana, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
This book had some good tools for parents to use, but it seemed a little too negative. It tended to treat teens like a foreign enemy that cannot be possibly understood, and must be strongarmed into good behavior. A better book, in my opinion, is "52 Ways to Protect Your Teen" by Susie Vanderlip. This book takes a more positive, love-based angle and teaches us to remember what it was like for us to be a teenager all those years ago. I think that is a way better approach to building a stronger relationship with a teenage child. This book is unfortunately no longer available from Amazon, but can be purchased at www.waystoprotect.com .
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stop Negotiating With Your Teenb: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent,
By
This review is from: Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent (Paperback)
I am working toward a M.A. Degree in Marriage, Family and Child Counseling. I am also a single parent with a teenage son. Dr. Edgette's book provides excellent insight for those of us with a permissive parenting style.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Stop Negotiating With Your Teen: Strategies for Parenting Your Angry, Manipulative, Moody, or Depressed Adolescent by Janet Sasson Edgette (Paperback - August 6, 2002)
$14.95 $9.96
In Stock | ||