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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary - 
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Tuesday, September 7, 2004

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>>  The Teen Code--A Wake Up Call for Parents

Bookstore shelves abound with titles offering advice for parents.
Various psychologists, self-appointed "experts," and medical doctors
offer advice on a range of topics, reflecting an ever broader array of
worldviews. Books on parenting adolescents have been a special growth
industry for some time, with puzzled and harried parents often trying to
figure out what is going on in the minds of their teenagers. A new
offering in this field, The Teen Code, now offers advice on parenting
teens with a unique twist--the book was written by a 17-year-old boy.

Rhett Godfrey is a young man with a message. As author of The Teen Code,
he conducted research involving over one thousand teenagers. Rhett
displays obvious gifts and intelligence, and his new book offers an
interesting angle sure to catch public attention. At the same time, the
book's underlying concept tells us a great deal about the shift of
authority from parents to children that marks our contemporary age.

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As Rhett tells the book's story, "Over the course of almost 3 years,
I've been exchanging ideas with teens of how parents can communicate
with us better. In person, over the phone, and mostly over the Internet,
I've talked to kids about their parents, what they have done right, what
they haven't done at all, and most importantly, what they could do
better."

What did this young author discover? "I found out quickly that it's not
so much what parents say that causes problems, it's how they say it that
causes us to shut down, tune out, and stop listening. And I couldn't
believe how much of what our parents said was just not getting through."
In order to help parents out, Rhett Godfrey now offers his book of
suggestions, organized around themes ranging from drugs and alcohol to
sex and privacy.

As the book's title indicates, Rhett points to what he calls a "teen
code"--a system of language and communication that parents often do not
understand. As he explains, "it defines how we think and act, why we get
tattoos and piercings, why we experiment with dangerous stuff, and how
and why we are who we are, teens of today." Rhett invites parents to see
him as "going off to spy on the other side to bring you back inside
information: the little stuff your kids wish you knew."

Rhett offers some advice that is undeniably helpful. He stresses that
teenagers would have their parents begin conversations on difficult
issues earlier rather than later. "The most successful drug
conversations are with younger teens, say 11 to 13 years," he suggests,
"and the least successful are with older teens from 16 to 18." He also
suggests that parents use events of daily life, and happenings in the
news to raise significant and deep subjects. He calls on parents to use
cultural "Jumper Cables" to "jump-start the conversation." He also
suggests that parents not decide to have intrusive and substantial
conversations on issues like drugs and sex in the teen's bedroom, where
the young person may feel uncomfortable.

Throughout the book, the young author documents the frustration
experienced by many teenagers when their parents make inadequate
attempts at discussing an issue of importance. As "Willis," age sixteen,
told Rhett: "I told my dad that you were writing a book about
communication between parents and teens and then I told him that you are
working on the chapter about drugs. His only response to that was,
'You're not doing drugs, are you?' I said, 'No, Dad, of course not,' and
that was where the conversation ended." Similar frustrations were
registered by teenagers who complained that their parents actually did
not say anything about sex at all, and seemed reluctant to admit that
their own children might be struggling with sexual issues.

Nevertheless, the most interesting aspect of this book is the particular
kind of advice that Rhett offers parents about how to address issues
likely to be flashpoints and potential trouble.

For instance, when it comes to alcohol, Rhett suggests that, at least
for older teens, drinking is "more of an inevitability than a
possibility." Thus, parents should talk to their teenagers about how to
drink alcohol safely, rather than not at all. "The leap of faith is to
accept that we will most likely drink in the future or may be drinking
now, and since you will probably never know about it, it's better not to
take the risk, so prepare us realistically, not idealistically." So,
Rhett advises, concentrate on convincing your kids of the danger of
drunk driving, not of the evil of alcohol itself.

Rhett took a similar approach on the issue of sex. As he told his
readers, "Sex is one of those areas with a high Scary Quotient, so brace
yourself. Here is what a lot of kids told me about the role of sex in
their lives." Right from the onset, Rhett lays down the law on oral sex.
"Of all the teens that I interviewed on this topic, it seemed like maybe
one or two in a hundred considered oral sex to be sex." As he continued,
"When I was in seventh grade, to have oral sex was a big deal: We only
knew one kid in the whole grade who said he did it (but most of us
thought he was lying). By mid-year eighth grade, oral sex was no big
deal--everyone said they were doing it (and this time we knew they
weren't lying). By the time high school rolled around, giving and
receiving oral sex became so normal that it was basically expected, even
in casual hook-ups." In other words, oral sex is not sex, parents--so
deal with it.

Rhett also suggests that parents should teach children "about the proper
way to use a condom." In other words, parents should join the "safe sex"
bandwagon, and leave behind any real hope of sexual abstinence and
sexual purity.

Throughout the volume, Rhett's mom, Neal S. Godfrey, offers a response
at the end of each chapter. When it comes to sex, Rhett's mom talks
right out of the safe-sex handbook. "Should parents buy condoms for
their kids? There's certainly an argument for it. At least that way you
can be sure that your kids have them, even though it doesn't guarantee
they'll use them. But for a lot of us it just doesn't feel right. We may
not believe that abstinence is the answer to sex education. But we still
don't want to be in the position of appearing to encourage our kids to
have sex." So, what does she propose? "Maybe the mom who put the condoms
in the cookie jar on the kitchen counter has the right idea. It's
halfway between."

Halfway between what? What teenager whose parents put a cookie jar of
condoms on the kitchen counter is going to realistically believe that
they expect him to refrain from sexual intercourse until marriage?

What about homosexuality? As Rhett explains, "I know that certain
religions--and millions of people around the world--think that it is a
horrible thing. But if your teenager is gay and thinks you feel this
way, it's going to make for a very difficult life for both you and your
child. The question you need to ask yourself is: Do you hate
homosexuality more than you love your child?" Rhett is thoroughly
convinced that sexual orientation is simply "part of who your child is,"
and thus parents should just deal with it.

An even more fascinating section gets further into the heart of the
matter. In discussing teenagers and the issue of privacy, Rhett counsels
parents to prove their trust by granting their teenage children a wide
swath of privacy, even when they suspect wrongful or dangerous behavior.
Privacy, he offers, "is a sacred thing to teenagers."

Rhett tells the story of "Jessica," a sixteen-year-old girl in Akron,
Ohio. As Jessica relates, "My mom came to me one day with pictures of me
and my friends drinking and smoking (and not just cigarettes). I got in
sooo much trouble. But I also was so [outraged] that she went through my
purse. She told me that she was looking for makeup and she just saw
them. I know that is [nonsense]; why would she want any of my makeup? We
have totally different tastes. I felt really betrayed, and we didn't
talk for awhile."

Here we have a sixteen-year-old girl whose experiments in drinking and
smoking marijuana have gotten her in trouble, though the consequences of
that trouble, if any, are not provided. The main function of Jessica's
story, however, is to warn parents against snooping.

Rhett asked Jessica if her mother was able to regain Jessica's trust.
She responded: "My mom and I are actually better than we were before
now. She made large efforts to show me that she respects my space. Like
before she used to clean my room (probably just for the reason of
finding something she could use against me), and now she does not even
set foot in my room. Seeing the pictures was a shock to her because
before that she thought I was this innocent little girl, but now she
knows what I do when she is not around. When we talk now about that kind
of stuff, it's not like parent-child, it's more real."

Rhett offered an extended commentary on the whole episode. "Jessica's
mom gave a bogus story that Jessica did not believe and lost her
daughter's trust. But she was able to gain it back by showing her
daughter that she respects her and her privacy. This actually helped
their relationship in many ways."

This little episode is a profound illustration of the complete inversion
of values and subversion of authority that marks our modern times.
Jessica's mom had every reason to be outraged, concerned, and indignant
about her daughter's use of alcohol and marijuana, but the whole point
of this story in Rhett's book is to show that it was the mom whose
behavior needed correction, not the daughter.

When Jessica explains that her mother, having been thoroughly
disciplined for snooping in her room, now respects her space and "does
not even set foot in my room," we see the absolute victory of adolescent
rebellion over parental oversight, authority, and discipline. When
Jessica says that, after she successfully clarified the power structure
in their relationship, "it's not like parent-child, it's more real," she
is telling us more than she could possibly intend to relate.

The Teen Code offers many interesting insights, but the most fascinating
aspects of this book are those the author certainly did not intend to
communicate. Even as he offers patronizing advice to parents about how
we should speak to our teenage children, he demonstrates with almost
poetic perfection the absolute victory of the child over the parent, and
the almost complete subversion of parental authority.

The underlying message of the book is that parents can indeed parent
their teenagers, so long as we parent them as they will allow themselves
to be parented. Now, armed with advice from an adolescent expert,
parents are told that we must just accept the fact that vast areas of
our children's lives are off limits, and that we should treat our
teenagers as autonomous individuals who happen to live in our homes and
are doing their best to negotiate around our discipline and moralizing.
America's parents owe a debt of gratitude to young Rhett Godfrey for his
new book. The Teen Code serves as a prophetic warning and an
all-too-accurate description of the teenage mind at work.

This very gifted young man has given America's parents a gift--and an
unintended wake-up call. In all too many homes, the inmates are running
the asylum.


____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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