Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you grapple with this? My daughter is using her low Xanax script as a catch all for everything wrong in life. I have college professor friends who say they are bombarded with emails from kids blaming everything on anxiety, requesting extensions, extra time on exams, etc.
OP, first off, was your DD actually diagnosed with anxiety or was she just given a prescription b/c she complained of anxiety? Xanax is addictive and can easily turn into abuse. I would report any doctor who would give this to teen or young person. That seems incredibly irresponsible.
If she truly has anxiety, she needs to be on a mood stabilizer, e.g., anti-depressant that she will take every day for the long term. She may need a full assessment if she hasn't already. CBT would also probably be useful if she's having trouble dealing with every day life.
+1 all of this!
Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and depression are absolutely hot excuses.
—tenured professor
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you grapple with this? My daughter is using her low Xanax script as a catch all for everything wrong in life. I have college professor friends who say they are bombarded with emails from kids blaming everything on anxiety, requesting extensions, extra time on exams, etc.
OP, first off, was your DD actually diagnosed with anxiety or was she just given a prescription b/c she complained of anxiety? Xanax is addictive and can easily turn into abuse. I would report any doctor who would give this to teen or young person. That seems incredibly irresponsible.
If she truly has anxiety, she needs to be on a mood stabilizer, e.g., anti-depressant that she will take every day for the long term. She may need a full assessment if she hasn't already. CBT would also probably be useful if she's having trouble dealing with every day life.
Anonymous wrote:How do you grapple with this? My daughter is using her low Xanax script as a catch all for everything wrong in life. I have college professor friends who say they are bombarded with emails from kids blaming everything on anxiety, requesting extensions, extra time on exams, etc.
Anonymous wrote:They're real issues that can actually honestly impact everything in someone's life, sometimes profoundly. The important thing -- which many newly diagnosed people (which teens often are) and many teens with these diagnoses in general by virtue of being young people can struggle with -- is to learn to manage your condition(s) while minimizing the disruptive influence it has on your life. So, yes, a lot of things are likely the result of anxiety/depression if a person has them, but that's just an explanation... it only becomes an excuse if the person lets it, and life doesn't often accept that. Teens with anxiety and/or depression need their issues acknowledged and they need to be supported, but they also need to be gently and compassionately supported in figuring out how to work around those challenges and be successful anyway. I have both, diagnosed with anxiety at 8 and depression in my early 20s (have always had it but my father didn't believe in it). They're real issues, but they shouldn't be allowed to become real excuses for not owning your own shit.
Anonymous wrote:They're real issues that can actually honestly impact everything in someone's life, sometimes profoundly. The important thing -- which many newly diagnosed people (which teens often are) and many teens with these diagnoses in general by virtue of being young people can struggle with -- is to learn to manage your condition(s) while minimizing the disruptive influence it has on your life. So, yes, a lot of things are likely the result of anxiety/depression if a person has them, but that's just an explanation... it only becomes an excuse if the person lets it, and life doesn't often accept that. Teens with anxiety and/or depression need their issues acknowledged and they need to be supported, but they also need to be gently and compassionately supported in figuring out how to work around those challenges and be successful anyway. I have both, diagnosed with anxiety at 8 and depression in my early 20s (have always had it but my father didn't believe in it). They're real issues, but they shouldn't be allowed to become real excuses for not owning your own shit.