Anonymous wrote:
Stop with the medication already unless it’s something serious like schizotypal! It messes up their brains and you’re numbing them out, just let them deal with their feelings. They’ll grow out of it eventually. I was a teen and had these feelings and they went away. In college, I even had some suicide ideation, which btw I blame on medication, birth control ones. I still have moments of feeling lost and I’m middle age now, I shout at myself ‘just snap out of it, silly girl’.
Ask her how would she like to spend her time, she doesn’t have to fit some ‘role model’ and listen to idiotic influencers. Ask her if she had her own daughter what advice would she give her. Don’t pressure her, let her be, and to hell with peer pressure. There’s no ideal, everyone is an original.
From there, confidence will build with repetition!
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was so much like your daughter when I was 16...and truly, I wish I had had a mom like you who could pick up on this stuff and try to do something about it. I was also a good student, good at presentations, interviews, etc. But horrible at having something to say to my peers.
I'm not sure about medication - you'll have to talk to a professional and listen to your gut. But I have social anxiety and generalized anxiety and I've been able to manage it without meds. I exercise, meditate, and did a lot of CBT. Also making sure that good sleep happens.
Beyond the exercise, sleep, CBT, and meditation (things that I think all people need!), what also helped me was volunteering/working with young kids. For some reason, the social interactions were never an issue when the people were much younger than me. I tutored, was also a camp counselor. Can you try that? I also worked at a coop as a teen (Takoma Park coop - is that still around?) for 2-3 hours a week and that also helped. I think she needs sustained social interaction with people on a regular basis to get comfortable. Once it becomes easier she'll be less likely to want to stay at home all the time. For a lot of introverts, its just about getting to that place with 2-3 people before you take the plunge socially.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think it is our issue as parents as to why our kids have so many mental disorders these days? Especially anxiety and depression.
Maybe if we stopped structuring our kids lives and let them go off and play after school, they might have some better social skills, street smarts, confidence, and common sense.
This generation of kids is in organized everything. School, sports, aftercare, camps, and yes even birthday parties are now structured. Maybe it is time to see the damage of too much school/homework, too many sports/activities, too much expectations of these kids but NEVER giving them the autonomy to jump on their bike and go off for a few hours. Free time. Play time. Imagination time. Social time. Mistakes time. Creative time. Relationship time (with others and even just themselves)
If they were coddled, structured, perfected, and helped all their lives, why are we so shocked in the tween/teen years when we finally give them a tiny bit of freedom to socialize without their mommy crutch and they just can't do it right.
Sorry, but I think this generation of parents are the worse. Stressed, perfectionest, obsessed, keeping up with the jones', coddling, swooping in to prevent their kids getting hurt or making mistakes. And while they are so demanding of the persona of their kids, they ironically let them skirt basic chores, responsibilities, and occasionally respect because they are "so busy" all the time.
Off my soapbox
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think it is our issue as parents as to why our kids have so many mental disorders these days? Especially anxiety and depression.
Maybe if we stopped structuring our kids lives and let them go off and play after school, they might have some better social skills, street smarts, confidence, and common sense.
This generation of kids is in organized everything. School, sports, aftercare, camps, and yes even birthday parties are now structured. Maybe it is time to see the damage of too much school/homework, too many sports/activities, too much expectations of these kids but NEVER giving them the autonomy to jump on their bike and go off for a few hours. Free time. Play time. Imagination time. Social time. Mistakes time. Creative time. Relationship time (with others and even just themselves)
If they were coddled, structured, perfected, and helped all their lives, why are we so shocked in the tween/teen years when we finally give them a tiny bit of freedom to socialize without their mommy crutch and they just can't do it right.
Sorry, but I think this generation of parents are the worse. Stressed, perfectionest, obsessed, keeping up with the jones', coddling, swooping in to prevent their kids getting hurt or making mistakes. And while they are so demanding of the persona of their kids, they ironically let them skirt basic chores, responsibilities, and occasionally respect because they are "so busy" all the time.
Off my soapbox
Does anyone think it is our issue as parents as to why our kids have so many mental disorders these days? Especially anxiety and depression.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think it is our issue as parents as to why our kids have so many mental disorders these days? Especially anxiety and depression.
Maybe if we stopped structuring our kids lives and let them go off and play after school, they might have some better social skills, street smarts, confidence, and common sense.
This generation of kids is in organized everything. School, sports, aftercare, camps, and yes even birthday parties are now structured. Maybe it is time to see the damage of too much school/homework, too many sports/activities, too much expectations of these kids but NEVER giving them the autonomy to jump on their bike and go off for a few hours. Free time. Play time. Imagination time. Social time. Mistakes time. Creative time. Relationship time (with others and even just themselves)
If they were coddled, structured, perfected, and helped all their lives, why are we so shocked in the tween/teen years when we finally give them a tiny bit of freedom to socialize without their mommy crutch and they just can't do it right.
Sorry, but I think this generation of parents are the worse. Stressed, perfectionest, obsessed, keeping up with the jones', coddling, swooping in to prevent their kids getting hurt or making mistakes. And while they are so demanding of the persona of their kids, they ironically let them skirt basic chores, responsibilities, and occasionally respect because they are "so busy" all the time.
Off my soapbox