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PARENTGUIDE
PARENTGUIDE

Alien Species
Communicating with Tweens = Communicating with Aliens.

by Marcel Danesi

PARENTGUIDE News March 2004


With their own peculiar ways of talking and acting, tweenagers seem to belong to a race apart. Communicating with them frequently appears, in fact, to constitute an encounter with an “alien” species. Why? Have pubescent children always been this way? Or, is the so-called “tweenager” a product of the modern world?

Troublesome and rebellious youths have always existed. Herodotus (circa 485-425 BC), the Greek historian, tells of a Sumerian father who carved in stone a portrait of his bored and defiant son four millennia ago. But tweens today live in a culture that is vastly different— a culture that sees boredom and defiance as “natural” features of maturation. Of course, nature has a role to play in adolescence, producing those “raging hormones” that seem to have pubescent children on a leash. But, ultimately it is culture that shapes the coming-of-age period.

Painting a portrait of the tween “alien species” was the objective of a fact-finding project I undertook with several research assistants at the University of Toronto a few years ago. What we found was that, in many ways, the tweens of today are no different from the tweens of yesterday— their parents and even grandparents! This is so because it has become an economic imperative of the modern world. Ever since adolescence became a primary target of the media and the entertainment industries in the mid-1950s, tweenagers have been good for business. It is no exaggeration to claim that the foundations of our current economy are largely implanted in the terrain of adolescence. Trends start and end there. Pop culture and teen culture have become virtual synonyms.

Whether we were immersed in Elvis culture, disco scenes, punk culture or a hard rock lifestyle is irrelevant. The point is we adults today were once perceived as “difficult works-in-progress,” rather than as “finished products,” by our parents and teachers. I can recall my late mother cringing at my tastes in clothing and music when I reached the age of 13 in the late 1950s. I dismissed this at the time as “adult insanity.” I now fully appreciate what she must have been going through. Most people alive today have grown up in a culture that has become accustomed to seeing tweenagers as “alien” creatures who are impelled by nature to be that way— temporarily at least.

Adolescence has always been about hanging out with peers, going to parties, smoking cigarettes, consuming alcohol, engaging casually in sexual activities and making one’s physical appearance different from that of adults. It should thus come as no surprise to find that today’s tweens have their own clothing fashions and music, and that they continue to see themselves as distinct from adults. But there is one crucial difference. In no other era has the tendency for lifestyle fads to pass quickly from the tween culture to the adult one been so strong.

As a consequence, differences between young and old have become blurrier than ever before. A mother could wear her 12-year-old daughter’s clothes without getting a second look and, vice versa, the daughter could wear her mother’s clothes without appearing in no way to be precocious. Having a “cool look” at any age has become the defining mindset of the modern world. As a consequence, the figure of the wise elder has faded away from communal consciousness. People now turn to the media, to psychologists or to self-help books for advice. But these are hardly adequate replacements for the wisdom that comes from experience.

Adolescents need and expect adults to be adults. This has several implications
that I believe may be useful (if not vital) for parents who truly want to bridge the communication gap that may exist between themselves and their tweenagers.

• Above all else, it is totally unnecessary (and it may be even counterproductive) to
attempt to talk and look like one’s tween. Influenced by current cultural trends, we assume that becoming like our tweens will bridge the gap that may exist. Nothing could be further from the truth.

• Tweenagers are “mature” individuals. Once puberty arrives, children have the ability to think and act responsibly. They must therefore be perceived and treated like mature and responsible individuals. They cannot simply be told what is best for them and what to do. Adolescents want a relationship with parents that is different from what it was when they were children. They hate being called “kids.”

• Tweenagers should never be labeled as “weird” or “bizarre.” Not only does this have no meaning to them, but it also ignores the fact that tween lifestyle choices are products of social forces that are beyond anyone’s control. One must, however, keep a close eye on peers, for peer pressure can influence a young person to leave home, to join a gang or cult, to take drugs or to take upon himself some perilous risk. The good news is that such pressure weakens considerably in the later stages of adolescence, as the research team found. Thus, the operative word here is, and always has been, “patience!”

• Family arguments over such things as clothing, friendships, musical tastes, and the like, are common. These are, and have always been, destructive events. What makes every tween’s blood boil are expressions such as “When I was your age...” and “Young people today, do not understand.” The moralizing tone in such phrases only increases the “emotional noise” in communications; and this leads in turn to confrontational behavior.

• Tweens often do things that seem to be dangerous or silly. But reprimanding them is useless. Don’t use “I told you so!” A better approach would be to react as one would to another adult: “Be careful next time.” Simply put, tweenagers must be treated like the mature individuals they are.

As a final word, we must never forget that tweens have an awful lot of things to say that are meaningful and even profound, no matter how they phrase their thoughts. We should always listen to them with an open mind and avoid being judgmental. And, above all else, we must communicate with them in a mature and “dignified” manner. In his great novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the British writer George Orwell saw language as the key to ethical and consequential communication. The worst world in which one could possibly live, he emphasized, is one in which people turn instinctively to trendy new words, yet end up saying virtually nothing of value. Only language that is honest, straightforward and kindhearted will have a lasting and meaningful effect on people. That is certainly the case when it comes to communicating with tweens today.

Marcel Danesi is professor of Anthropology and Communication Theory at the University of Toronto. He teaches courses on youth culture and is actively involved in researching youth trends. His recent book, My Son Is An Alien: A Cultural Portrait of Today’s Youth (Rowman & Littlefield), is an an entertaining and informative look at today’s youth based on interviews with teens, tweens and parents.

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