Yea...summer is here. Some of your teens may have been shipped out to  various camps, programs, far-away islands, and you are all enjoying a  little break from the trials and tribulations of daily teen life.  However, many of you are looking at 8 weeks of "what are you going to do  all day?" conversations. If you do not have a teen who has found a job,  internship or volunteer gig, here are some ideas on how to keep your  teen from turning into a video gaming, jersey shore watching,  shopaholic, comatose during the day, but strangely energized come  sundown person.
1. All teens need money to survive  during the summer. Those nightly jaunts into town, to the mall, or out  to dinner with friends all cost money. Pair money to gym workouts, book  reading. As in, "I get you need money when you go out with your friends.  Here is the deal, you can earn money for your hangs by getting off the  couch. Every time you hit the gym, you earn some cash. When I see you  reading for an hour, you get some cash. When you actually do some stuff  around the house, ie laundry, cleaning your room, making your bed etc,  you get some cash. Should you choose to just sit around the house all  day, no cash. Of course you can always find a job, internship, volunteer  something,which I would love to help you with, but I cannot support you  being on the computer, facebooking, playing video games and watching tv  all day. That's the deal."
2. For those of you who  have video game addicts. These guys are looking at the summer as an orgy  of game playing. If they are not involved in any activities, jobs, etc  you are looking at the potential of your son playing for 12 hours a day.  NOT GOOD!!! Get a device for your device that can be programmed for  finite amount of use. Your teen can earn video game play by exchanging  other activity participation. Like above, book reading, exercise,  internship, lawn work, be creative. But DO NOT let your teen play video  games all day and night. Come September, you will have a full-fledged  addict!
3. Summertime does mean more free time with  friends. Weather is warm, outdoor partying is the preferred option. Make  sure you continue to talk about safety with drug and alcohol use, and  sex. There is just more opportunity to participate in all of it. And now  that weekday nights are free and clear from homework obligations, there  is that much more to fill the days and nights. Use this system to help set expectations that are mutually agreeable. It will make for a much nicer summer for all.
A four question example:
Teen asks: "What time do I have to be home tonight?
Parent asks: What time do you think you should be home? 
Kid states a time. Lets say 11:00 PM
Parent  asks: What do you think I will be worried about if I say yes to 11.  This is your teen's opportunity to say out loud any of the dangers that  in fact you do worry about.
Parent asks: Yes those issues do worry me, what is your plan to make me feel OK, that you will stay safe?
Teen  needs to offer up a plan for safety around drugs and alcohol and other  safety issues curfew times, keeping you in the loop throughout the night  etc.  that hopefully he/she stated in the worry question.
Parent asks: What will the consequence be if you don't follow through on your plan?
Teen needs to put a consequence in place so that if he/she fails to follow though on the plan, a consequence is ready to go.
Engaging  your teen in this process of taking responsibility for behavior makes  for a calmer summer. They want more freedom, and you are giving them the  opportunity to take ownership. This does not in anyway give them carte  blanche to go and do whatever they want. Sometimes the plan is just not  good enough, perhaps it is too unsafe, or just not practical. No will  still mean no when you need it to.
 
 
 
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