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Teenage Peer Pressure Will Either Help Or Hurt Your Teenager, So Aid Your Teenager In Harnessing This Power For Good Today




"Never do a wrong thing to make a friend or to keep one."

Robert E. Lee (1807-1870)



Teenage Peer Pressure is the pressure or influence exerted on a teenager to conform to the attitudes, thoughts and actions of a group of peers with whom the Teenager associates with.



It is the innate desire within all of us to ’Fit In' with a group of people in order to be viewed as popular, attractive, cool, accepted . . . .

The list of reasons why Teenage Peer Pressure has a palpable influence on Teenagers is limited only to the imaginations and motivations of Teenagers themselves. The reasons are literally infinite.

Teenage Pregnancy, Teenage Behavior, Teenage Substance Abuse, Troubled Teens, Teenage Sexuality and other Teen Issues can in too many instances be traced back to the influence of Teenage Peer Pressure.

The reality is that Teenage Peer Pressure can be either negative or positive, depending on the group of peers exerting the pressure.

    Has Your Teenager Felt The Pull Of Peer Pressure?

What did you do to help them through it?

Share your story and help other parents today.

 

We almost always hear of negative peer pressure but the key is to understand that there also exists positive peer pressure, and to use this understanding to your, and to your Teenager’s, advantage.

It is Peer Pressure in general and Teenage Peer Pressure is particular that causes many Teenagers to act in ways that they otherwise would not act apart from the pressure they feel to conform to whatever group they wish to associate and identify with.

The goal as Parents is to educate our Teenage children to these pressures to conform that they most certainly feel and then to help them associate with those groups of Teenage Peers that we would wish our Teenagers to imitate.

If you illustrate the benefits clearly enough to your Teenager then they will almost always make the correct peer group decisions on their own.

A truth to Teenage Parenting is:

Show me who your Teenager associates with and I will show you who your Teenager will become.




Youth Group Fun - © Nutloaf



The Teenage years and meant to be fun, exciting, and full of new experiences.

The dangers occur when our Teenagers are pressured into making life style choices detrimental to their happiness and well-being, often without them knowing this is even happening.

If you feel that you are losing your teenager in the battle of Teenage Peer Pressure, you can get some needed help from this Highly Respected Parenting Program that can give you fresh ideas and tactics on how exactly to win this war and save your child and family .

Try it today as part of a Free Offer.

First and foremost, Parents need to fully understand with whom your Teenagers are spending their time and what they are doing with that time?

Some Parents hesitate to be too intrusive in their Teenager’s lives but as long as you are providing the love and monetary support for your children, you have every right to know what they are doing and with whom they are doing it with.

Become acquainted with your child’s friends and those with whom they spend their time.

Encourage your Teenagers to invite their friends over to the house and have lots of food waiting for them when they arrive.

Teenagers love to visit and they also love to eat. Tell your children their friends are welcome to come over anytime they like and you will get to know their friends in no time at all.

If you approve of the company your Teenagers are keeping, then tell them so. Commend them on their wise choice of friends and look for ways to support their wholesome activities and interests.

But if your Teenager won’t bring their friends over, or even let you meet them, then chances are high that their friends are not up to your standards and your Teenager knows it.

This is where you need to do some serious parenting and communication with your children.




Group Of Friends In Snow - © René Ehrhardt



For our purposes here it is assumed that you have already established within your home and family long-standing Family Rules and Expectations that your Teenager clearly understands and has agreed to live by.

(If this is not the case then you need to lay this important ground work within your home before going any further.)

In most cases having Family Rules and Expectations are enough to prevent your Teenagers from choosing the wrong groups of people to associate with.

However, Teenage Peer Pressure can at times win out over family expectations and sound common sense.

When this happens you need to remind your Teenager of your expectations and the dangers that can come from trying to ’Fit In’ with the wrong group of people.

Remind your Teenager of the dangers that can result if they actually do manage to ‘click’ with a group of people whose lives and futures are on a downward trajectory.

Teenagers are not stupid and don’t usually want to throw away their chances for a happy life and successful future.

If your Teenager seems to not care anymore about these things, or seems to not want to remove themselves from negative friends and negative Teenage Peer Pressure situations, then your Teenager is having troubles beyond what meets the eye.This is not a guess; it is a reality.

Talk to your Teenager immediately and in private.

Your Teenager may be having problems associate with Teenage Substance Abuse.

Perhaps your Teenager is having a challenge regarding the Teen Issue of Teenage Sexuality.

Perhaps your Teenager is being cyber-bullied or physically bullied.

Perhaps your Teenager has suffered a devastating personal setback in their life of which you know nothing about.

Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps.

If your Teenager doesn’t want to talk to you or even refuses to talk to you, then you know that you are on the right path and must kindly but firmly press forward to identify the problems that are challenging your Teenager so that you and your Teenager can work together to make things right before too much serious damage has been done.

At times it is necessary to simply forbid Teenagers from associating with the wrong group of people.

Even close friends may no longer be the right friends for your Teenagers to have. Life changes quickly and you need to be aware of how these changes may impact you and the ones you love.

As Parents we at times need to make the hard but correct choices for our Teenagers until they can resume making the correct decisions on their own.

These ‘Ultimatum’ moments are never easy nor pleasant but are absolutely necessary when a Teenager seems blinded to an obvious risk or danger that you as their Parent can see and understand clearly.

Honest, open, loving communication is what is needed.

Teenage Peer Pressure can cause all of these problems and more when it comes from negative friends and their negative influences.

When your Teenager wants to talk to you the least is when they need YOU to talk with them the most!






Teenage Peer Pressure is either good or bad, and your goal is to help your Teenager to choose wisely between the two.

Help your Teenager to see how the right choices will directly benefit them.

This really isn’t a hard thing to do once you start talking openly and sincerely with one another.

It also helps to give your Teenager the longer-term view that in many instances, after the dances and formals and proms and other fun times associated with the Teenage years are over, advanced education, work and life itself has a way of pulling people apart for destinations unknown.




Make 10 Gorgeous People! - © Nutmeg



Often the people you tried so much to impress as a Teenager are the same ones who will never see you again once High School graduation has come and gone.

What a shame to care so much about impressing those who really care about you only for a season.

Such is the nature of the Teenage years, and hence the importance of being the Parent who can bring a sense of balance and reality to those who are affected by these Teenage Peer Pressure issues.

Help your Teenager to see the larger picture in their young lives.

Help your Teenager to find the way to be comfortable with who they are and how they wish to live their life with rules, standards and the expectation of a happy future.



And then help your Teenager to surround themselves with others who are happy to be around someone who lives the way your Teenager lives.

Create Positive Teenage Peer Pressure moments for your Teenager to enjoy, then get out of their way to enjoy them.





There is a lot more parenting wisdom to share. Here is another Teenage Peer Pressure thought: Help your Teenager and their friends find ways to have fun and wholesome activities together so they can avoid the negative consequences of negative Peer Pressure at any time, for any reason, over and over again.









Help Your Teenager Find Cool And Creative Ways To Make Healthy Choices By Creating Positive Peer Pressure Situations As An Alternative To The Negative.









Help Teenagers to surround themselves with friends and activities that are fun and wholesome and the power of negative peer pressure will begin to melt away.


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