• Lying and Your 13-Year-Old

  • Sep 24 2024
  • Length: 24 mins
  • Podcast

Lying and Your 13-Year-Old

  • Summary

  • Trust is foundational for healthy relationships. As a parent or someone in a parenting role, you play an important role in your thirteen-year-old’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-child/teen relationship and understand how to promote trust in your child/teen.

    Lying represents an important milestone in your child’s/teen’s thinking as they learn that others have different beliefs and perspectives than their own. Experimenting with lying is a normal part of child development. Children/Teens can begin to lie and understand deception as early as preschool to cover up actions that they know are against the rules. A complete understanding of lying and its consequences continues to develop throughout childhood and adolescence as part of their cognitive and moral development.

    Children/Teens ages eleven to fourteen are in the process of understanding and making predictions about others’ thoughts and feelings. As they do, they also may seek to hide the truth, particularly if they fear harsh judgment from respected adults or peers. They are also testing boundaries and taking more risks socially and academically. Their risk-taking can often lead to mistakes, misbehaviors, or even failure.

    Often, lies relate to challenges with impulse control. For example, an eleven-year-old might think, “I wish I had more friends and was popular. If I tell those kids I have the most expensive gaming system, they may think I’m cool and invite me to hang out with them.” Though younger children cannot distinguish between the subtleties of deception, those eleven and older can understand the differences between honest mistakes, guesses, exaggerations, sarcasm, and irony.

    The key to many parenting challenges, like raising children/teens who grow in their understanding of the value of truth-telling, is finding ways to communicate so that both your and your child’s/teen’s needs are met. The steps below will prepare you to help your child/teen learn more about your family values, how they relate to lying, and how you can grow and deepen your trusting relationship.

    Why Lying?

    Whether it’s your eleven-year-old lying about eating the lunch you packed them for school, your twelve-year-old lying about failing a test, or your fourteen-year-old telling you a friend’s parents are home supervising them when they aren’t, your child’s/teen’s ability to tell the truth can become a regular challenge if you don’t create plans and strategies.

    Today, in the short term, honesty can create

    ● greater opportunities for connection and enjoyment

    ● trust in each other

    ● a sense of well-being for a parent and teen

    ● added daily peace of mind

    Tomorrow, in the long term, your child/teen

    ● builds skills in self-awareness

    ● builds skills in social awareness, perspective-taking, empathy, and compassion

    ● builds skills in self-control

    ● develops moral and consequential thinking and decision-making

    Five Steps for Teaching Your Child/Teen About Honesty

    This five-step process helps you teach your child/teen about honesty. It also builds essential skills in your child/teen. The same process can also be used to address other parenting issues (learn more about the process[1] ).

    Tip: These steps are best when you and your child/teen are not tired or in a rush.
    Tip: Intentional communication[2] and a healthy parenting relationship
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