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You are at:Home » Help, the teen years are coming! Four ways to lessen conflict in adolescence | Canada Voices
Help, the teen years are coming! Four ways to lessen conflict in adolescence | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

Help, the teen years are coming! Four ways to lessen conflict in adolescence | Canada Voices

15 March 20266 Mins Read

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Illustration by The Globe and Mail/iStock

Ask a Child Psychologist offers insights and advice on navigating youth emotional and mental well–being. It is not a substitute for professional psychological or medical advice.

It’s common to hear parents say, “I’m not ready for the teen years,” bracing themselves for this stage as though conflict and disagreement are inevitable. While adolescence certainly brings emotional, social and neurological changes that can be challenging to navigate, there are ways parents can help make these years less tumultuous.

Large–scale research examining parent–child relationships across cultures has found that warmth, closeness and low levels of persistent conflict are associated with better emotional adjustment in children and adolescents.

Conversely, ongoing family conflict is linked to higher rates of emotional and behavioural difficulties. At the same time, observational research on parent–adolescent interactions suggests that conflict itself is not the problem. Disagreement is a normal part of development. What matters most is how conflict is managed, particularly parents’ ability to regulate emotions, de–escalate tension and help bring interactions to a close in constructive ways.

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In other words, adolescence is not defined by conflict so much as by relationships under pressure. When parents remain steady, emotionally regulated and connected, everyday arguments can become opportunities for growth rather than sources of frustration .

Prevention – not reaction – is the most powerful parenting strategy, not because conflict can be avoided, but because strong, connected parent-child relationships make inevitable challenges easier to navigate. That prevention is built long before tensions erupt, through everyday practices that quietly shape how adolescents experience family relationships, responsibility and independence.

Drawing on my clinical experience, here are four practices that matter most.

Build the relationship before you need it

Long before children become teenagers, parents can establish a relationship grounded in trust, emotional safety and reliability. At its core, this means becoming the person your child turns to when something goes wrong. That relationship is built through emotional regulation, listening and consistency instead of through lectures or rules alone.

Small, everyday moments of connection are often when children share what is on their minds. Sit together at dinner, drive them to their activities, or make time to talk before bed. These moments are most meaningful when they unfold naturally, but parents can help by slowing down, limiting distractions and making space for conversation.

Pick your battles

As children move into adolescence, parents are often pulled into frequent conflict over small behaviours such as tone of voice, messy rooms, eye rolls or moodiness. This is where picking battles becomes essential. Families benefit from a small number of clear, non-negotiable rules grounded in respect and safety. For example, no swearing at family members and no behaviour that puts someone at risk. Outside those boundaries, letting minor irritations pass can significantly reduce tension.

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Not every scowl needs a response and not every slammed door requires a conversation. Adolescents are navigating heightened emotions and a growing need for independence. Their brains are undergoing rapid development – particularly in areas responsible for emotional reactivity and impulse control – while they simultaneously experience a growing need for independence. Try to reduce unnecessary conflict to preserve the relationship so you can step in when it truly matters.

Sometimes the most effective response is calm neutrality: “You seem upset – we can talk later.”

Keep teens meaningfully engaged

Adolescence is a period of exploring identity. While the parent-child relationship remains the emotional anchor, teenagers also need structured opportunities to experience competence, belonging and independence beyond the family. Predictable routines, meaningful responsibilities and a sense of belonging through participation at home, school, or in the community reduce the likelihood that young people will seek connection or stimulation in risky ways.

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Engagement does not require exceptional talent or performance. The goal is participation, routine and building social networks. A weekly art class, helping coach younger players, or working a few hours at a local café can be just as valuable as competitive athletics.

Regularly show interest in your teens’ activities by asking about practice, attending events, or noticing their efforts. When you acknowledge their commitment, they are more likely to remain engaged.

Support learning and future goals

A common source of parent-child conflict during the teen years centres on schoolwork, motivation and academic responsibility. One way parents can stay ahead of these tensions is by keeping education and future-oriented thinking an active priority throughout adolescence.

The teenage years bring increasing academic demands at a time when planning, organization, and time management skills are still developing. Guidance and support are not signs of weakness or over–parenting – they are part of teaching competence and preventing predictable challenges from escalating into chronic conflict.

When parents ask me how much help to provide their kids, I usually say: as much as they need to support their learning and progress. Allowing a teenager to fail a major course because their planning skills are immature rarely teaches responsibility; more often, it narrows future options and increases stress, shame and parent–child tension. Effective parenting balances growing independence with appropriate scaffolding so young people reach adulthood without missed opportunities.

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This could mean mapping out a project timeline with your teen, helping them break down big assignments into manageable steps, or encouraging them to get started when they feel overwhelmed. As skills strengthen, support can gradually fade, reducing conflict over time rather than intensifying it.

When parents invest early in their relationships with their children, provide steady structure, keep young people engaged and support the gradual development of independence, the teenage years are more likely to unfold as a period of growth rather than struggle.

Mistakes will still happen – that’s part of growing up – but they will occur within the safety of a stable relationship. Parents will make mistakes too. Staying calm, choosing your battles, and responding thoughtfully is not always easy, and there will be moments when conflict escalates despite your best intentions.

What matters most is returning to the relationship – repairing, reconnecting, and modelling how to move forward after difficult moments. The goal is not to prevent stumbling, but to ensure young people move toward adulthood feeling supported, capable and confident that home remains their safest place to land.

Want to ask a child psychologist?

If you have questions about navigating the complexities of child and youth emotional and mental well-being, we want to hear from you. Are you trying to figure out how to support your child’s mental health? Grappling with special education needs? Helping your adolescent or teen cope with issues related to social media, relationships or anxiety? Please keep your questions general in nature and submit them for Dr. Roberts to consider addressing in future columns. This does not replace professional medical advice.

Dr. Jillian Roberts is a research professor of educational psychology at the University of Victoria. She is also a practising registered psychologist in British Columbia, Alberta, Yukon and the Northwest Territories. She specializes in child and adolescent development, family therapy and inclusive education.

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