C. Lynn Williams, an author on parenting books, spoke to Lon Woodbury and Liz McGhee on Parent Choices for Struggling Teens on L.A. Talk Radio about the unique relationship between mothers and sons. She discussed how this relationship was quite different from a father and son relationship, as well as a mother and daughter relationship.
Parents Choices for Struggling Teens is hosted by Lon Woodbury, an Independent Educational Consultant who releases the well-known Woodbury Reports. He began working with struggling adolescents in 1984. Meanwhile, his co-host Liz McGhee is the Director of Admissions for Sandhill Development Center in New Mexico. She has over 19 years of clinical consulting experience with adolescents.
Guest Background
C. Lynn Williams coaches parents, and she is also an educator and a writer. She holds an MBA from Roosevelt University in Chicago, Illinois. Besides teaching parenting in schools and corporations, she teaches parents and adolescents how to build fulfilling relationships. Williams is also a wife and mother, with four grownup children. She has authored three publications on parenting: the first, on exactly how parents can keep stay calm while raising teens; the second, on raising sons; and the third, on raising girls.
How Mothers and Sons Can Build a Positive, Respectful, and Loving Relationship
Williams did not actually expect to write another book after she finished her first book, "Trying to Stay Sane While Raising Your Teen." However, in the course of her teaching work, she met numerous mothers and sons that did not get along and became curious about this unique relationship. Her research resulted in her writing, "The Pampered Prince: Moms Create a GREAT Relationship with Your Son."
During the course of the hour-long interview, she explored the theme of how parenting between mothers and fathers differed and stressed exactly how a male role model is important to help boys mature. She pointed out that discipline from a mother's point of view is enhanced when she follows up on threatened consequences when chores are not done. By contrast, dad's had an easier time giving orders because kids reacted better to direct orders instead of descriptions.
Williams also discussed how befriending children is counterproductive to effective parenting. A parent had to choose between the role of parent and the role of friend. Giving children things did not necessarily win them over and make them more obedient.
She compared the connection between dads and boys and moms and daughters, and talked about how it was simpler for fathers to connect to boys and moms to associate with girls because they were familiar with how to connect to the thought patterns of the same sex.
The mothers and sons interview provided many parenting tips, like learning love languages, being readily available, creating boundaries, and improving interaction. Williams also discussed the value of parenting based on the age of the child, the challenge of raising millennial youngsters, the value of keeping family dinner traditions, and some efficient means of combating the influence of any kind of unfavorable peer groups.
Parents Choices for Struggling Teens is hosted by Lon Woodbury, an Independent Educational Consultant who releases the well-known Woodbury Reports. He began working with struggling adolescents in 1984. Meanwhile, his co-host Liz McGhee is the Director of Admissions for Sandhill Development Center in New Mexico. She has over 19 years of clinical consulting experience with adolescents.
Guest Background
C. Lynn Williams coaches parents, and she is also an educator and a writer. She holds an MBA from Roosevelt University in Chicago, Illinois. Besides teaching parenting in schools and corporations, she teaches parents and adolescents how to build fulfilling relationships. Williams is also a wife and mother, with four grownup children. She has authored three publications on parenting: the first, on exactly how parents can keep stay calm while raising teens; the second, on raising sons; and the third, on raising girls.
How Mothers and Sons Can Build a Positive, Respectful, and Loving Relationship
Williams did not actually expect to write another book after she finished her first book, "Trying to Stay Sane While Raising Your Teen." However, in the course of her teaching work, she met numerous mothers and sons that did not get along and became curious about this unique relationship. Her research resulted in her writing, "The Pampered Prince: Moms Create a GREAT Relationship with Your Son."
During the course of the hour-long interview, she explored the theme of how parenting between mothers and fathers differed and stressed exactly how a male role model is important to help boys mature. She pointed out that discipline from a mother's point of view is enhanced when she follows up on threatened consequences when chores are not done. By contrast, dad's had an easier time giving orders because kids reacted better to direct orders instead of descriptions.
Williams also discussed how befriending children is counterproductive to effective parenting. A parent had to choose between the role of parent and the role of friend. Giving children things did not necessarily win them over and make them more obedient.
She compared the connection between dads and boys and moms and daughters, and talked about how it was simpler for fathers to connect to boys and moms to associate with girls because they were familiar with how to connect to the thought patterns of the same sex.
The mothers and sons interview provided many parenting tips, like learning love languages, being readily available, creating boundaries, and improving interaction. Williams also discussed the value of parenting based on the age of the child, the challenge of raising millennial youngsters, the value of keeping family dinner traditions, and some efficient means of combating the influence of any kind of unfavorable peer groups.
About the Author:
Lon Woodbury, the founder of Struggling Teens, has recorded the entire interview on his weekly L.A. Talk Radio show for people to at their convenience.
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