EduNews Magazine Summer '15/'16 | Page 18

To some extent the majority of parents become extremely anxious or frustrated when their beloved blue-eyed blonde-haired star rugby player turns into a slothlike hygiene-less mood-sample. This is a normal phase every boy will reach – sooner or later – in their development, the same phase your husband went through once too. Puberty – a physical and psychological cocktail that is characteristic of teenagers at some stage during their development – is defined as a process of physical changes through which a child’s body matures into an adult body capable of sexual reproduction to enable fertilization. It is initiated by hormonal signals from the brain to the gonads which refers toa boys testes. Parents tend to forget that it is not only physical changes – bodily metamorphosis – that is shaping their child but also psychological changes in relation to their social, cognitive, emotional and sexual functioning. Most parents find it difficult and challenging to not only live with a teenager who is going through puberty but to also handle the challenges that accompany these changes as well as to maintain a strong and positive parent-child relationship. This is the norm in most households with a pubertal-teenager. There are a few measures that parents – both mother’s and father’s – can put into place to not only assist their child when he is experiencing emotional turmoil but also to strive to maintain a healthy home-environment and to ensure that the relationships within the family stays intact. Talk talk talk Do not be afraid to talk to your son when it comes to the “changes” he is experiencing. Some boys will find it somewhat embarrassing talking to their mothers about pubic hair, erections or even nocturnal dreams. Best the dad take to addressing these topics. Mothers should cover topics regarding their behaviour towards girls, showing respect and what behaviour is appropriate