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If your teen seems “fine” at school but comes home and shuts down, snaps, or explodes… this episode will help you understand what’s really going on.
Here’s what’s really going on: your teen isn’t becoming someone disrespectful — they’re releasing what they’ve been holding all day.
In this episode, we walk through a common parenting moment — the after-school explosion — and gently shift the lens from “What’s wrong with my teen?” to “What is this behavior trying to communicate?”
Because behavior is information, not the problem.
You’ll hear a powerful reframe that helps you move from reacting to guiding, while strengthening your relationship in the moments that matter most.
Nothing has gone wrong.
When your teen comes home and unravels, it’s not a sign you’re failing — it’s often a sign they feel safe enough to release.
And that changes how we respond.
Instead of:
“Why are they acting like this?”
Try:
“What might they be holding that’s finally coming out?”
That one shift moves you from control → connection.
When we only focus on the leaves (behavior), we miss what’s actually driving change.
The next time your teen comes home dysregulated, pause before correcting.
Instead of:
“You can’t talk to me like that.”
Try:
“Hey… did you have a long day?”
This isn’t about fixing — it’s about guiding.
You don’t have to get it right in the moment.
In fact, repair can be more powerful.
It might sound like:
“I got defensive earlier. I took that personally. I’m sorry. Are you okay?”
That’s how emotional safety is built — not through perfection, but through presence and accountability.
If this dynamic feels familiar, this makes sense.
Most parents were taught to manage behavior — not understand nervous systems, identity, or emotional regulation.
And that’s exactly what we begin to shift here.
If you want support becoming a calm, confident guide for your teen:
👉 Join the Confident & Connected free class
👉 Visit: https://www.theteenageguide.com/class
If May already feels overwhelming — finals, graduations, summer planning — you’re not doing it wrong.
You’re doing a lot.
The May Reset is a 90-minute workshop designed to help you:
This is about making the season feel different — not more pressure.
SIGN UP TO MAY RESET HERE
Before your teen walks through the door tomorrow…
just take a breath and ask yourself:
“Am I preparing to correct them… or to understand them?”
That shift changes everything.
By Ashley Chandler4.8
44 ratings
If your teen seems “fine” at school but comes home and shuts down, snaps, or explodes… this episode will help you understand what’s really going on.
Here’s what’s really going on: your teen isn’t becoming someone disrespectful — they’re releasing what they’ve been holding all day.
In this episode, we walk through a common parenting moment — the after-school explosion — and gently shift the lens from “What’s wrong with my teen?” to “What is this behavior trying to communicate?”
Because behavior is information, not the problem.
You’ll hear a powerful reframe that helps you move from reacting to guiding, while strengthening your relationship in the moments that matter most.
Nothing has gone wrong.
When your teen comes home and unravels, it’s not a sign you’re failing — it’s often a sign they feel safe enough to release.
And that changes how we respond.
Instead of:
“Why are they acting like this?”
Try:
“What might they be holding that’s finally coming out?”
That one shift moves you from control → connection.
When we only focus on the leaves (behavior), we miss what’s actually driving change.
The next time your teen comes home dysregulated, pause before correcting.
Instead of:
“You can’t talk to me like that.”
Try:
“Hey… did you have a long day?”
This isn’t about fixing — it’s about guiding.
You don’t have to get it right in the moment.
In fact, repair can be more powerful.
It might sound like:
“I got defensive earlier. I took that personally. I’m sorry. Are you okay?”
That’s how emotional safety is built — not through perfection, but through presence and accountability.
If this dynamic feels familiar, this makes sense.
Most parents were taught to manage behavior — not understand nervous systems, identity, or emotional regulation.
And that’s exactly what we begin to shift here.
If you want support becoming a calm, confident guide for your teen:
👉 Join the Confident & Connected free class
👉 Visit: https://www.theteenageguide.com/class
If May already feels overwhelming — finals, graduations, summer planning — you’re not doing it wrong.
You’re doing a lot.
The May Reset is a 90-minute workshop designed to help you:
This is about making the season feel different — not more pressure.
SIGN UP TO MAY RESET HERE
Before your teen walks through the door tomorrow…
just take a breath and ask yourself:
“Am I preparing to correct them… or to understand them?”
That shift changes everything.