LISA LANE COMEDY

finding the funny in parenting, marriage, and middle age
  • VIDEO+PHOTOS+BIO
  • Comedy Shows
  • FOR PARENTS
  • CORPORATE EVENTS
  • Voiceover/Announcing
  • CONTACT
  • VIDEO+PHOTOS+BIO
  • Comedy Shows
  • FOR PARENTS
  • CORPORATE EVENTS
  • Voiceover/Announcing
  • CONTACT

Blog

Real-life advice for frazzled, frustrated families. Lisa Lane Filholm shares frank and funny observations from her time in the trenches otherwise known as high-school English class.

  • All
  • How to Talk to Teens
  • KNOW-PROTECT-HONOR
  • Role Models Who HONOR
  • Role Models Who KNOW
  • Role Models Who PROTECT
  • The Great Weed Debate
  • Why Teenagers Suck
  • Why We Must Not HIBERNATE

(Handle with Care)

Lisa Lane September 15, 2014

Researchers tell us the adolescent brain is similar in many ways to a toddler’s. If you like to quantify things, you’ll love it. The research is often mathematical: the two-year-old brain and the teenaged brain are strikingly parallel. I really do hope you will read about it, but the real evidence lies before our eyes in those unholy disasters we call the bedrooms of our teenagers.

Think about it: the two-year-old acts impulsively. She needs to be reminded that the stove is hot, to stay out of the street, to keep peas out of her nose. The two-year-old says, “no” as a matter of habit. He recklessly challenges limits, wants to “do it myself” and requires frequent naps to keep from imploding. I don’t know about you, but my husband and I could safely say the same about our teenagers.

Thinking about our adolescent children as overgrown, smelly versions of their toddler selves has helped our family. A wise and irreverent therapist has guided every single one of us—and all of us together—out of the wilderness of adolescent rebellion and back onto a path that allows our family to grow and love and respect one another along the way. One of the most valuable tools she gave us was the reminder that teenagers are a lot like two-year-olds. When we remember, my husband I laugh more. When he recalls that toddlers can’t be expected to focus on an entire round of golf, he finds humor in the fifteen-year-old collapsing into giggles on the eleventh tee box. (It is all very confusing, remember, because adolescence is indeed a regression. This same child played golf with the attention-span of a PGA veteran when he was seven years old. My husband had to adjust his expectations, which can confound the best of us.)

When we recall that toddlers forget to flush the toilet and brush their teeth and pick up their toys, these teenagers make more sense. Surely you would not entrust a two-year-old with remembering her backpack, or putting his athletic cup somewhere besides the kitchen counter, or to deliver an important message to his teacher. So when the teenager loses yet another cell phone or fails to turn in yet another (completed) homework assignment, it is helpful and amusing to remember the toddler brain at work. We don’t give up on the idea of a two-year-old maturing. We know she will someday become more responsible and independent. We keep pinning notes to backs and delivering forgotten lunches, knowing it’s just a phase. It’s the same deal with teenagers, only they’re way less cute and their meltdowns are kind of scary.

Even the kids themselves—in my own family and in the classroom—do well to remember they are a lot like toddlers. My husband has, to great effect, taken a child by the hand and said, “Hey, Little Buddy, let me show you again how we throw our clothes into the hamper and not on the floor. I know you can’t remember because you’re really only two, so let’s just have another lesson.” This approach inevitably cracks up the teenager in question and has netted more consistent results than my knee-jerk approach (whirling about like a Tasmanian devil, leaving everyone in my path frightened and exhausted). A sense of humor and shared laughter with our teens are healthy antidotes to their attitudes. My husband’s instinctive ability to connect in this way with our children is one of his best qualities, and acknowledging their toddler tendencies helps every time.

Yes, teenagers are like overgrown toddlers, and we do best to raise them with as much love and vigilance as we do our two-year-olds.

InWhy We Must Not HIBERNATE
  • Blog
  • Older
  • Newer
Featured
Dec 10, 2018
Ring in 2019 with a new approach to parenting teenagers!
Dec 10, 2018
Dec 10, 2018
Apr 11, 2018
Love is a Good Local Bookstore (#TatteredCover)
Apr 11, 2018
Apr 11, 2018
Apr 3, 2018
Big Week in Denver! Tune in; Come Join Me!
Apr 3, 2018
Apr 3, 2018
Mar 22, 2018
Event Tonight for Proactive Parents! 03.22.18
Mar 22, 2018
Mar 22, 2018
Feb 26, 2018
Is Family Life Kicking Your A**? [A Reminder: Teens Are Exhausting, but Worth It]
Feb 26, 2018
Feb 26, 2018
Feb 9, 2018
Galentine’s Day Gift Ideas for Mamas of Teenagers
Feb 9, 2018
Feb 9, 2018
Jan 30, 2018
How to Find the Funny When a Teenager is Bringing You Down
Jan 30, 2018
Jan 30, 2018
Jan 25, 2018
New in 2018!
Jan 25, 2018
Jan 25, 2018
Jun 20, 2017
Share Your Wisdom! How do you handle summer curfew for teens (and almost teens)?
Jun 20, 2017
Jun 20, 2017
Apr 12, 2017
New Article in YOUR TEEN Magazine: Meet Teens Where They Are . . .
Apr 12, 2017
Apr 12, 2017
Jan 9, 2017
Three Ways to KNOW Who Your Teenagers Really Are
Jan 9, 2017
Jan 9, 2017
Dec 19, 2016
What to Give Teens for Christmas? (Best-Worst Gift EVER.)
Dec 19, 2016
Dec 19, 2016
Nov 22, 2016
#Grateful: Thanksgiving Pondering for Parents of Teenagers
Nov 22, 2016
Nov 22, 2016
Nov 6, 2016
Election Edition: SHELTER FROM THE STORM
Nov 6, 2016
Nov 6, 2016
Oct 7, 2016
"Hey! This is the first time I've done this! Help me!" (Keepin' It Real with Teenagers)
Oct 7, 2016
Oct 7, 2016
Sep 27, 2016
Role Models Who HONOR
Rock + Hard Place = Parenting. Chart Your Course and Sail On.
Sep 27, 2016
Role Models Who HONOR
Sep 27, 2016
Role Models Who HONOR
Sep 22, 2016
Hope for Frazzled Families: Live Event 9-29-2016, Denver South HS
Sep 22, 2016
Sep 22, 2016
Sep 9, 2016
You Are HERE: How to Tell You’ve Entered Teenage Wasteland (Chapter 2, Part 2)
Sep 9, 2016
Sep 9, 2016
Sep 4, 2016
"What Happened to My Kid?" A Parent's Lament (Chapter 2, Part 1)
Sep 4, 2016
Sep 4, 2016
Aug 31, 2016
This Child of Ours: Grief.
Aug 31, 2016
Aug 31, 2016
facebook instagram-unauth
  • About BEYOND MAMA BEAR
  • About Me

©BeyondMamaBear 2014

LISA LANE COMEDY

finding the funny in parenting, marriage, and middle age

facebook instagram-unauth