Written by Tiffani Dhooge
Letโs stop pretending we didnโt see it coming.
The slammed door.
The overdramatic sigh.
The full-body โyouโre ruining my lifeโ meltdown.
And yetโฆ.we act surprised. Like our teenagers are supposed to thank us for setting boundaries around the one thing theyโre most addicted to.
Weโre not parenting a generation that casually checks their phone. Weโre parenting kids who are wired into itโemotionally, socially, and biochemically. When we try to pull them back, even a little, it feels like weโre taking away oxygen.
So YES, thereโs going to be pushback.
There should be pushback.
As Dr. Julie Radlauer said in this weekโs episode: โIโm not going to level up just because you do.โ
Let that sink in.
You donโt have to match their meltdown.
You donโt have to raise your voice just because they raised theirs.
You donโt have to take it personally.
This is the job: holding the line while their emotions swing like a wrecking ball.
You walk in knowing itโs going to suck and you set the boundary anyway.
Because leadership isnโt about making everyone happy. Itโs about doing whatโs right, even when itโs hardโESPECIALLY when itโs hard.
So the next time your teenager flips out because you dared to say โno phone after 9,โ remember this: their reaction doesnโt mean you failed.
Let them yell.
Let them roll their eyes.
Let them feel it.
And then? STAND YOUR GROUND.
How to Hold the Line (Without Losing Your Mind)
1. Expect the resistance.
Go in grounded, not aggressive.
Remind yourself: This will be hard. That doesnโt mean I should stop.
2. Donโt match their energy.
Their freak-out doesnโt require one from you.
Breathe. Speak clearly. If you need a break, take one. But donโt get dragged into their emotional storm.
3. Give them spaceโwithout backing down.
Let them be mad. Let them feel what they feel.
Say: โI get that youโre upset. Youโre allowed to be. But the boundary stays.โ
Then step away if you need to. Thatโs not giving in. Thatโs modeling regulation and emotional maturity.
4. Make it collaborative, not punitive.
Use the Social Media Checkup Assessment together.
Compare answers. Talk it out. When they feel heardโeven if they don’t like the outcomeโtheyโre way less likely to see you as the enemy.
5. Remind them (and yourself): This isnโt about control.
Itโs about safety. Balance. Mental health.
This isnโt just about their phone habits. Itโs about how they learn to tolerate discomfort, manage impulse, and build resilience in the real world. Life doesnโt hand out free passes for emotional regulation. They have to practice it somewhereโand it starts here.
And the next time they scream, โYouโre the worst parent ever!โ
SMILE and think: Actually, I might be the best.




































