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Home –› Home Family & Garden –› Parenting
 

Teenagers and Violence: What Parents Can Do

 
Author: Jeff Herring
 

Q: The recent rash of school violence has my wife and me very upset and worried. Why does this stuff keep happening and what can we do to prevent it? How do we tell if our kids are at risk for violent behavior?

Ive been asked this question often in the wake of all the recent school violence. In a recent TV interview, I turned the questions around to ask, How could this not be happening and Why doesnt it happen even more often?

Heres what I mean by these questions - although there are many more factors involved, just consider these three:

kids listen to increasingly violent music, see increasingly violent movies and TV shows, and play increasingly violent video games. All of these without any focus on the real life, long term consequences of violence.

kids have more and more easy access to weapons that can maim and kill

more and more kids get no moral education, and walk around with an underdeveloped conscious at best, and at worst, no conscious at all.

It doesnt take a rocket scientist or a psychologist to get it that these three ingredients alone are a prescription for disaster.

Warning signs

No one really knows exactly why one kid will snap and another one wont. At the same time, here a few warning signs for parents and others to watch for:

a history and enjoyment of violent behavior

an inability to feel and/or show remorse

excessive fascination with violent video games and movies

easy access to weapons

little or no parental/adult supervision

little or no impulse control

recent rejections, disappointments or loss of hope

violent and/or suicidal thoughts, threats or other speech

the loss of someone close, either through death, a move, or a break up

a friend or someone they look up to taking a recent violent action

Again, its important to remember that kid A could have most or all of these signs and become violent, while kid B could have the same signs and not go off. The most important question to answer, I believe, is what can we do to prevent this kind of stuff in our kids.

Here are a few suggestions:

Know your kids world. I realize every parent thinks they know the world of their kid, but do you really? Do you know what kind of lyrics and music is going into their brains all day? Have you looked at the lyrics? Do you know what games they play, what movies they watch? Are you sure? The reason I am so adamant about this is I believe that if enough parents really knew what was going on out there, the stuff I hear every day, there would be some type of revolution.

In the words of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, teach your children well. Teach them:

when someone is beaten up or severely hurt, it takes a long time to heal, physically and emotionally

when someone is killed, they are gone, do not come back, and people grieve their loss

if you get hit like guys get hit on TV wrestling, you dont get up, you go to the hospital

how to problem solve without violence

what to do with the anger and rage we all experience

And last but not least, run, dont walk, to your nearest bookstore and pick up a copy of Stephen Glenns book Raising Self-Reliant Children in a Self-Indulgent World. In it you will find the results of Glenns research into the problems of youth, the Significant Seven Factors that separate high risk kids from low risk kids and how to encourage them in your family.

 
 
 

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