Synopses & Reviews
How is a parent to know what to say-and when and how to say it-when talking to teens about all those big, scary topics that are tough to discuss?
In researching this book for the past 3 years, 17-year-old Rhett Godfrey interviewed hundreds of teenagers about how their parents talk to them about "the big stuff": sex, drugs, privacy, school problems, cigarettes and alcohol, divorce and remarriage and self-expression.
Now Rhett reports back--in frank and surprising conversations--how teens really feel about these touchy subjects. What's more, he shares the best methods that parents have used to open up dialogue behind closed doors. Rhett's mother, #1 New York Times bestselling author Neale S. Godfrey (Money Doesn't Grow on Trees), then helps parents make sense out of what teens say they want from parents-from her own experience as well as from interviews with experts.
In the first book to ever take us inside the teen mind to help us understand these topics their point of view, parents will discover how to establish an environment of honesty and open dialogue in their homes so they can better guide their kids through the rocky road of adolescence by understanding:
- Why teenagers think oral sex isn't really sex and alcohol is not a drug. And how to convince them otherwise.
- How to correct the most common mistake parents make in talking with their kids about drugs. Hint: It involves the phrase "You aren't doing drugs, are you?"
- How to still be on good terms with your son after his mohawk grows out and piercings close.
Review
Parents must read this book! After working with over 300,000 teens I know they need someone to decode their experiences into solutions that parents can use for stronger relationships. Rhett Godfrey does it by translating todays teen experience into practical strategies that parents will benefit from immediately. These are secrets that parents need to hear.(Jason Ryan Dorsey, Best-selling author of Graduate to Your Perfect Job)
Review
Rhett Godfreys The Teen Code tells you what teens are thinking. Reading it will help you to keep honest communication open. Keep in mind, what teens say they want from you isnt always the same as what you should provide. They still need limits. But even when they roll their eyes at you, theyre listening, and they need you to listen, too. This book is a good start to understanding whey theyre coming from.(Sylvia Rimm, Ph.D.)
Synopsis
In the first book to ever take us inside the teen mind to help us understand these topics from their point of view, parents will discover how to establish an environment of honesty and open dialogue in their homes so they can better guide their kids through the. rocky road of adolescence by understanding: - Why teenagers think oral sex isn't really sex and alcohol is not a drug. And how to convince them otherwise.- How to correct the most common mistake parents make in talking with their kids about drugs.- How-to still be on good, terms with your son after his mohawk grows out and piercings close.
Synopsis
Taking parents inside the teen mind, this guide helps parents navigate the rocky road of adolescence by understanding topics from their child's point of view.
About the Author
Rhett Godfrey is a high school senior and an expert in one thing: being a teenager. He's conversed with teens from every state to help parents understand what kids really think-and the secret code for getting them to listen. This is his first book.
Neale S. Godfrey is Rhett's mother, so she doesn't always know how teens, including her own son, think. But she's willing to listen, as were the child behavior experts she interviewed in response to Rhett's findings. Her book Money Doesn't Grow on Trees was the #1 New York Times bestseller.