Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network
Teaching “Adulting” – MBFLP 234 (New Year Replay)
Studies show that young adults are often not prepared for adult independence. Psychologists say the current generation is growing up slowly, and some even say “Twenty-five is the new fifteen”!* But if our parents and grandparents were functioning adults at 18 or 20, why can’t our kids be the same? This episode we’re talking about how to teach adult skills intentionally to our teenagers – and what to do if they graduated before you were done teaching!
Podcast: Making Biblical Family Life Practical
Hosts: Hal & Melanie Young
Episode: Teaching Adulting (Replay)
How do you help your kids move from being cared for… to being capable?
In this replay episode, Hal and Melanie Young tackle a growing concern among parents: many teens and young adults are leaving home without the basic skills needed for adulthood—not because parents don’t care, but because they were never shown how to make the transition.
From chores and budgeting to decision-making and responsibility, this episode offers practical, biblical guidance for raising competent, confident adults—without fear, guilt, or burnout.
Why “Adulting” Doesn’t Happen AutomaticallyHal and Melanie discuss how modern parenting often removes obstacles for children with good intentions—but unintended consequences. When parents do everything, kids miss the chance to learn:
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How to manage money and pay bills
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How to work for pay and value responsibility
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How to cook, clean, and care for themselves
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How to make decisions—and live with the results
Research shows fewer teens today are working, driving, or taking on household responsibilities than in previous generations—leaving many unprepared for independence.
When Adulting Should Start (Hint: It’s Earlier Than You Think)Adulting doesn’t begin at 18—it begins in the preteen and teen years.
Key practices discussed in this episode include:
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Giving meaningful, skill-building chores (not just “feed the dog” tasks)
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Teaching teens to cook full meals, do laundry, and manage a household
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Encouraging initiative rather than nagging
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Allowing teens to make decisions while consequences are still manageable
These steps don’t overwhelm kids—they equip them.
Coaching Teens Through Real-Life ResponsibilitiesOne of the most powerful lessons in this episode is the idea of side-by-side training, not sudden independence.
Hal and Melanie explain how to:
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Walk teens through paying bills before handing them full responsibility
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Teach budgeting, due dates, and financial prioritization
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Gradually transfer responsibility while staying available to coach
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Let teens experience appropriate consequences without abandonment
This mirrors the biblical model of discipleship—watch, do together, then do independently.
What Skills Should Teens Have Before Leaving Home?The Youngs encourage parents to intentionally ask:
“What do we want our kids to be able to do when they leave our home?”
Some essentials discussed:
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Driving safely and confidently
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Cooking real meals (not just reheating food)
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Managing money and paying bills
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Doing laundry and basic home care
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Making appointments and advocating for themselves
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Changing a tire and handling basic emergencies
These aren’t extreme expectations—they’re life skills.
A Biblical Perspective on Maturity and PracticeHal connects adulting skills to Hebrews 5:14, reminding parents that maturity comes through practice, not protection from every challenge.
True preparation means:
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Teaching discernment
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Allowing responsibility
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Coaching through mistakes
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Building confidence through experience
This isn’t about control—it’s about discipleship.
Encouragement for Parents Who Feel BehindIf you’re thinking, “We haven’t done this well,” this episode offers hope.
It’s not too late to:
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Start teaching life skills
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Walk your teen through responsibilities
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Shift from managing to mentoring
Adulting is taught by doing adult things—together, then independently.
???? Listen to the full episode to hear real-life examples, biblical wisdom, and practical steps you can start using right away.
For more encouragement and resources, visit HalandMelanie.com or follow Hal and Melanie on social media through Raising Real Men.





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