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What's Really Going On With Significant Others?
An article from David R. Smith at TheSource4YM.com
Girls get a manicure and pedicure. Guys get a haircut and call up a friend to brag about who they’re going out with that night
These are just a few of the things teenagers do before the date.Parents and youth workers have long-recognized that teenagers can experience tremendous highs and desperate lows when it comes to dating. When the Facebook profile changes from “single” to “in a relationship,” the words of Charles Dickens have never been truer: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”
This growing problem has actually given birth to websites that help teenagers draw a line about what is acceptable behavior in dating relationships, and what is not.
Fortunately, not everything is gloom and doom with teen dating relationships.
The Best of Times
In spite of this cloud of funk currently hanging over teen romances, there is some good news.
Going back to the Kiss and Tell report once more, most teenagers (68% of boys and 69% of girls) say that their friends are in “healthy” romantic relationships. Granted, what makes a relationship “healthy” might be a bit relative, but we do know that trust and honesty are big players in the mind of teenagers. 40% of guys and 48% of girls rank trust as the most important component in a healthy relationship, with honesty finishing a close second. Further, less than 3% of interviewed teens say “looks” or “popularity” mattered most.
Here’s more good news. 35% of teenagers claimed “parents” to be the biggest influence on their dating practices. Here are the contenders:
Maybe the best news yet is that a majority of teens (51% of guys and 53% of girls) think parents should start talking with them about sex, love, and relationships when they are 13 or 14 years old. (27% of guys and 30% of girls say the conversation should start even earlier, at age 12 or younger!)
Making Sense of the Numbers
Parents and youth workers know there are dangers and risks associated with dating. Hey, once upon a time, we did it ourselves! With all the stats and the research on teens and dating/sex/relationships, the one that should capture our attention is that parents hold the key to influencing who and how teenagers date today, and that a majority of teens are open to conversations about love/sex/dating.
Parents need to take advantage of the pillar that teenagers have placed them on, and do all that they can to positively affect the way dating happens. If parents do not act quickly and effectively, they may slide down in order of importance on the list of influencers mentioned above. The last thing parents need is for other teenagers or the media giving instruction to their kids about dating.
TheSource4YM.com has several resources to help youth workers deal with the subject, like this one, but we also provide a host of free resources to parents on the subject, as well. We just want to do all that we can to help you make the biggest difference you can in the lives of teenagers you love.
David R. Smith is the Director of Content Development at TheSource4YM.com, providing truly free resources and ideas that help youth workers reach kids. David speaks and trains around the U.S., sharing the gospel, and equipping others to do the same.
A good article. I just emailed it to a parent of one of my 6th grade boys to encourage her to talk openly and often with him. Thanks!
Will 11:01:40am on 1/19/2009
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