How Parents Can Create Positive Change in Their Teen’s Life


Date: April 2, 2026

After ten years working in treatment foster care, I’ve met more teens and parents than I can count. Some stories still tug at my heart, some keep me up at night, and all have taught me something about what it really means to care for a young person who’s struggling. If I could gather every parent—especially those feeling lost, frustrated, or stuck—in one room, there’s one truth I’d want to share above all else:

It’s not just your child. You are part of the story—and you are part of the solution.


Understanding Teen Behavior: Why It’s Not Just About “Bad Choices”

Let’s be honest: it’s so easy to focus on what our kids are doing wrong. When a teen acts out, it’s tempting to blame them, to see the behavior as the problem. But the hard truth—the thing I wish every parent knew—is that we, as adults, play a role too. Sometimes we’re repeating patterns, reacting on autopilot, or expecting our kids to manage feelings and behaviors they simply don’t have the skills for yet (see my earlier post, “Why Teens Act Out: Understanding What’s Really Going On”). They’re not “bad”—they’re learning, and so are we.


Why Parents Must Be Willing to Change First

What I learned, again and again, is that if we want our kids to change, we have to be willing to change ourselves first. I know, it feels unfair—shouldn’t they be the ones to adapt? But the old saying is true: insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. Our kids might be driving us a little insane, but we’re the ones who can try something new and actually change the outcome.


Growth Is Messy: Giving Yourself Grace as a Parent

It’s not about being perfect. Change is tough, messy, and sometimes discouraging. You’ll try something that flops. You’ll lose your cool. You’ll wonder if you’re making any difference at all. But trying—showing up, learning, trying again—always gets results. When we make the effort, our kids notice. They see our love in our willingness to grow. Sometimes, that’s the best and bravest place to start.

Give yourself some grace. If it didn’t work the first time, that doesn’t mean it never will. Growth takes time, for them and for us. Be patient—with your child and with yourself. And remember, you are the difference-maker in your kid’s life. When you change, they change. You grow together.


How Mutual Growth Strengthens the Parent-Teen Relationship

If you know me, you know I love musicals, and one of my favorite things to do with my kids is karaoke. My daughter and I have been singing “For Good” from Wicked together for years. The song is about two friends who change each other’s lives, but in our family, it’s taken on a new meaning: it’s about the difference I make in my daughter’s life, and the difference she makes in mine. My favorite line is the last one:

“Because I knew you, I have been changed for good.”

The moment I first met my children, my world shifted. They changed the way I see everything—myself, them, and the world around me. Because I love them, I keep changing and growing, and every time I do, I see them changing and growing too.


You Have the Power to Change Your Teen’s Life

So if I could tell every parent just one thing, it would be this: you have the power to change your child’s life—for good and for the better—by being willing to be the change yourself. That’s where the magic happens. And if you ever need a little inspiration, maybe turn up your favorite song and sing it out together. Sometimes, that’s where the healing starts.

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