Anonymous wrote:I'm the parent of a teen girl with serious mental health issues, some of which are undoubtedly genetic and some of which are the result of the ongoing trauma inflicted by abusive peers in person and online. I am really appalled that anyone would use the term "attention whoring" to describe young women who are asking for help and/or speaking about their struggles.
Anonymous wrote:I think that what a lot of teenagers don't understand is that there is clinical anxiety (not normal) and then there is the feeling of being anxious, which is a normal part of life. Some people may be more prone to feeling anxious (myself included, I have always been a perfectionist, type A person) but that doesn't mean that they have a clinical anxiety disorder. I do think that it is a smart idea to talk to teenagers about how they can deal with normal feelings of anxiety in a healthy way without overreacting.
On another note, I do think social media is having a detrimental effect on teenagers (particularly girls). Although it is fun and makes it easy to keep up with friends and family, I think there's an inherent sense of competition and striving for the perfection that people portray on social media that isn't good for young females to grow up with. Prime example of this is the instagram account "AmberFillerup" I see so many young girls commenting on her posts saying how she is "#goalz" and young teenagers may not realize how fake these social media celebrities' lives actually are.
Read a really interesting book about this over the summer: https://www.amazon.com/American-Girls-Social-Secret-Teenagers/dp/0385353928
Anonymous wrote:Mental illness is in, didn't you hear? High school girls are diagnosing themselves, and want to get tests these days, as so many of their friends have something wrong... it is a fad and peer following. Not all are truly having issues, plus what qualifies as anxiety today used to be considered part of growing up and even needed to do well in school. If you are smart you worry about how you will do on a test, with peers, but it rarely is clinical anxiety, yet parents and kids buy into this today.
Anonymous wrote:Mental illness is in, didn't you hear? High school girls are diagnosing themselves, and want to get tests these days, as so many of their friends have something wrong... it is a fad and peer following. Not all are truly having issues, plus what qualifies as anxiety today used to be considered part of growing up and even needed to do well in school. If you are smart you worry about how you will do on a test, with peers, but it rarely is clinical anxiety, yet parents and kids buy into this today.
Anonymous wrote:My DH and I have talked about this a lot but we are older - almost 50. We have two teens and the difference in how we were raised and how we are raising ours is huge. Some of it we are happy about but some we are not. Our neighborhood, kids peer group, schools have influence for good and bad.
One difference is that We spend so much time with our kids! Not complaining only sharing an observation. It is the expectation and the environment so with all this time together we see/ hear more ( or they tell us more?)
When we were kids we were in the neighborhood/ community with friends, no way to contact parents during the day from school! Now, The slightest thing and I get a text from a DC.
Only Hall phones and weekly letters when I started college so a lot of things we had to figure out on our own or with the help of our peers. Made mistakes and really dumb decisions a few times but I want to believe it allowed for growth and resilience?
I don't know but I see this dependence on parents and level of anxiety extremely high in my community. I know one can argue that there was a lot our parents did not know and that was not good either but there needs to be balance.
I'm not innocent as have fallen in to over - parenting at times. A lot has to do with the community. You feel your DC can do, see, plan, account for something but no other friend is " allowed" so you eventually just go along with the norm.
All this rambling to say I think maybe one theory is we spend too much time with our kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to college at 18 with a raging eating disorder and anxiety. This is nothing new?
Last year?
Anonymous wrote:I'm the parent of a teen girl with serious mental health issues, some of which are undoubtedly genetic and some of which are the result of the ongoing trauma inflicted by abusive peers in person and online. I am really appalled that anyone would use the term "attention whoring" to describe young women who are asking for help and/or speaking about their struggles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up here in the 80's and I don't think it is anything new... though I would say that the kids with anxieties were the top students taking too many honors/AP classes and could never satisfy their parents endless need for them to "do better than their parents".
I also went to a reunion and the "top" students are not exactly standouts professionally/personally. So it seems like it was all for naught.
I think it's this area, super competitive... extrinsic validation... pushing your kids to beat the Jones' kids.
I let my kids take life slowly, don't over do their school schedule (freshman year: took Algebra, no APs), let them navigate their sports, etc.... People act like I have 2 heads. OTOH, my brother who lives in Colorado had his son do test prep for the SATs and people looked at him like he had 2 heads.
he doesn't live in boulder does he?
Anonymous wrote:I grew up here in the 80's and I don't think it is anything new... though I would say that the kids with anxieties were the top students taking too many honors/AP classes and could never satisfy their parents endless need for them to "do better than their parents".
I also went to a reunion and the "top" students are not exactly standouts professionally/personally. So it seems like it was all for naught.
I think it's this area, super competitive... extrinsic validation... pushing your kids to beat the Jones' kids.
I let my kids take life slowly, don't over do their school schedule (freshman year: took Algebra, no APs), let them navigate their sports, etc.... People act like I have 2 heads. OTOH, my brother who lives in Colorado had his son do test prep for the SATs and people looked at him like he had 2 heads.