"The limits you place on your teenager's dating may say more about
your own love life than your teen's needs."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121434807055501441.html

WORK & FAMILY
By SUE SHELLENBARGER    

What the Dating Rules You Set
For Your Kids Say About You

Researchers have known for a while that closeness to parents is linked
to less risky sexual behavior by teenagers.

Now, they're turning their microscopes on the dating rules parents
set, with some surprising results: The limits you place on your
teenager's dating may say more about your own love life than your
teen's needs. Also, parents' satisfaction with their own life roles
shapes the kind of rules they set.
[Go to mailbox]1 MAILBOX

Columnist Sue Shellenbarger answers readers' questions2 about how to
maintain intimacy in a commuter marriage and where men can find
resources for short-term projects to do from home.

Parents who are involved in stable romantic relationships with spouses
or partners tend more than other parents to set rules limiting teen
dating behavior, such as curfews, minimum ages for dating, limits on
places teens can go and explicit rules against sexual activity, says a
new study of 169 parents and 102 teens by Stephanie Madsen, an
associate professor of psychology at Maryland's McDaniel College.
While the reason isn't clear, the author suggests these parents may
hold more conservative beliefs in general; many of the rules involved
sexuality.

Ironically, in what other researchers have called the "Romeo and
Juliet" effect, such rules may tend to drive teenage lovers closer;
teens of these parents reported closer, more positive relationships.

Parents who are unhappy, dissatisfied or insecure in love, however, go
beyond limits and try to dictate or control how their teens treat
their dates, the study found. These parents try to influence their
kids to value certain things and act in specific ways. Parents would
tell teens to open doors for dates, "act like a gentleman" (or a
lady), or resist letting a date "walk all over" them. The goal may be
to launch their teens on a romantic path happier than their own, Dr.
Madsen says. But kids often regard this advice as intrusive, and
again, it tended to have the opposite effect. The teens affected
weren't particularly content with their dating relationships.

The research rings true to me. As a single working parent of two, my
love life is near the bottom of my list of priorities. Like the
parents in the study, I find myself prescribing behaviors to my
teenage son, like "be a gentleman" -- advice he listens to
respectfully. But, I suspect, he keeps his own counsel.

A better way for parents to expend their energy, Dr. Madsen says, is
to emphasize constant, warm oversight over just setting rules. She
calls this setting "supervisory" rules, or keeping up a free flow of
communication without intruding too much. This means asking teens to
disclose plans, check in by phone and inform parents when plans
change. In such cases, the adults were focusing on their roles as
parents rather than their own love lives. These parents also had the
healthiest relationships with their children.

Debby Shulman and her husband, Allen, fall into this category. When
their 16-year-old son dates, says the Northbrook, Ill., mother, "he
can't leave one place without calling and letting me know where he's
going." She knows his friends' parents and checks in with them now and
then. "It's a great way to keep tabs on the kids without making them
feel you're breathing down their necks." Dr. Madsen says supervisory
parents also may arrange to meet their teen's dates and sometimes the
date's parents.

Some 64% of parents in Dr. Madsen's study had dating rules for their
17-to-19-year-olds, the age of the teens in the study. The rest
generally either had teens who weren't dating or gave their teens
autonomy in dating. Marni Kan of the research group RTI International
says many parents may be setting rules in response to research showing
parental supervision and communication with teens protects against
risky sexual behavior.

More recent studies have fine-tuned those findings by drawing a line
between supervision and meddling: Parental oversight seems to have
positive effects mainly when teens volunteer information about
themselves -- suggesting a trusting, respectful relationship is the
real foundation for the gains.

Write to Sue Shellenbarger at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121434807055501441.html

Kirim email ke