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Adolescent Psychology

The teenage years can be an emotional assault course for all concerned. A gulf can grow between parents and their children during adolescence. Why do so many of us find it so hard? It's a time of rapid physical development and deep emotional changes. These are exciting, but can also be confusing and uncomfortable for child and parent alike. This leaflet is mainly for the parents of teenagers and, perhaps, the grandparents of teenagers. We hope that some teenagers might also enjoy reading it. This article gives information about the process of adolescence, the upheavals it can cause, some of the problems that arise, and ways in which they can be managed.

Hormones, Timing and Changes

Physical

  • The process of rapid physical changes in adolescence is called puberty. It starts gradually, from around eleven years for girls and thirteen for boys. The age at which puberty starts has been dropping in most countries, probably due to better nutrition. So, your children may hit puberty earlier than you did. The hormone changes responsible actually begin some years earlier and may produce periods of moodiness and restlessness. Girls start these changes before boys and will, for the first three or four years, appear to be maturing much faster. After this, boys catch up.
  • These changes include:
    For girls: menstrual periods, growth of under-arm, body and pubic hair.
    For boys: voice breaks (becomes deeper), growth of body and pubic hair, facial hair, erections and wet dreams. For both: Rapid physical growth.
  • By the age of 17, they'll be young men and women who may be bigger than their parents and capable of having children themselves. In spite of this, they often still need support from you.
  • It is not surprising that, with the speed of these changes, some adolescents become very concerned about their appearance. They may need a lot of reassurance, especially if they are not growing or maturing as quickly as their friends.
  • They and their parents may worry less if they remember that there's a lot of difference in the ages at which these changes occur.
  • Growth and development uses a lot of energy, and this may be why teenagers often seem to need so much sleep. Their getting-up late may be irritating, but it may well not be just laziness.

Psychological

  • As well as growing taller, starting to shave or having periods, people of this age start to think and feel differently. They make close relationships outside the family, with friends of their own age. Relationships within the family also change. Parents become less important in their children's eyes as their life outside the family develops.
  • Real disagreements emerge for the first time as young people develop views of their own that are often not shared by their parents. · As everybody knows, adolescents spend a lot of time in each other's company, or on the telephone to each other. Although this can be irritating to parents, it is an important way of becoming more independent. These friendships are part of learning how to get on with other people and gaining a sense of identity that is distinct from that of the family. Clothes and appearance are a way of expressing solidarity with friends, although teenage children are still more likely to get their values from the family.
  • Parents often feel rejected, and in a sense they are. But this is often necessary for young people to develop their own identity. Even if you have rows and arguments, your children will usually think a lot of you. The rejections and conflicts are often not to do with your personalities, but simply with the fact that you are parents, from whom your children must become independent if they are to have their own life. · As they become more independent, young people want to try out new things, but often recognise that they have little experience to fall back on when things get difficult. This may produce rapid changes in self-confidence and behaviour - feeling very adult one minute, very young and inexperienced the next.
  • Being upset, feeling ill or lacking confidence can make them feel vulnerable. They may show this with sulky behaviour rather than obvious distress. Parents have to be pretty flexible to deal with all this, and may feel under considerable strain themselves.
  • Adolescence is the time when people first start in earnest to learn about the world and to find their place in it. This involves trying out new experiences, some of which may be risky or even dangerous.
  • Young people can crave excitement in a way that most adults find difficult to understand - and exciting activities may be dangerous. Fortunately, most people manage to find their excitement in music, sport, or other activities that involve a lot of energy but little real physical risk.
  • When they do experiment - with drink or drugs or smoking - it is usually with friends. If a young person does this alone, they are in much greater danger. Warnings from older adolescents will usually be taken more seriously than those from parents.

Emotional Problems

  • Over-eating, excessive sleepiness and a persistent over-concern with appearance may be signs of emotional distress.
  • Anxiety may produce phobias and panic attacks.
  • Recent research suggests that emotional disorders are often not recognised, even by family and friends.

Depression

  • At some time, 4 out of 10 adolescents have felt so miserable that they have cried and have wanted to get away from everyone and everything.
  • During their adolescence, more than 1 in 5 teenagers think so little of themselves that life does not seem worth living. In spite of these powerful feelings, depression may not be obvious to other people.

Sexual Problems

  • The dramatic physical changes of adolescence can be very worrying to some teenagers, especially to those who are shy and who don't like to ask questions. At the other end of the scale, some express their concern with excessive bragging about sexual ability and experiences.
  • More than half of young people in the UK will have had their first experience of sex before the age of 16 and so the risk of pregnancy is a significant part of adolescent life.
  • The age of consent for both heterosexual and homosexual intercourse is 16. It is illegal to have sex if either partner is under this age, even if they give consent.
  • Those who start having sex early are at greater risk of early pregnancy and health problems. Sexually transmitted diseases are common. HIV infection and AIDS are becoming more common.
  • Crushes on someone of the same sex are common in adolescence. Some go on to be gay, most don't.
  • Some young people (and their parents) will not be sure whether they are gay or straight.
  • Sensitive support, clear guidance and accurate information about these different aspects of sex are essential - from parents, schools, family doctors, and family planning clinics.
  • Most adolescents choose their partners quite carefully. Sleeping around and risky unprotected intercourse are often signs of underlying emotional problems. They may also be the signs of a risk-taking lifestyle - adolescents who take risks in one way tend to take risks in other ways as well.
  • Recent research suggests that girls who are close to their parents are less likely to become pregnant in their teenage years.
  • Teenagers can get confidential advice on contraception from their GP, who does not have to inform their parents. Emergency contraception from pharmacies is only available to those aged 16 or over.

Behaviour Problems

  • Teenagers and their parents complain about each other's behaviour. Parents often feel they have lost any sort of control or influence over their child. Adolescents want their parents to be clear and consistent about rules and boundaries, but at the same time may resent any restrictions on their growing freedom and ability to decide for themselves.
  • If disagreements are common and normal, when should you worry? Experience suggests that children are at greater risk of getting into trouble if their parents don't know where they are. So, try to make sure that you know where they are going and what they are up to. If you really don't know, you need to find out.

School Problems

  • Refusal to go to school can be due to:
  • Difficulties in separating from parents.
  • Being perfectionist, and becoming depressed because they can't do as well as they would want to.
  • Disturbed family life, with early separation from or death of parent.
  • An established pattern
  • it may have happened at primary school. Such children often have physical symptoms such as headache or stomach-ache.
  • Those who go to school, but then play truant, are usually unhappy at home and frustrated at school. They prefer to spend their days with others who feel the same way.
  • Emotional problems will often affect school work - worry about oneself, or about what is going on at home, makes it difficult to concentrate. Pressure to do well and to pass exams may come from parents or teachers, but adolescents usually want to do well and will push themselves. Excessive nagging can be counter-productive. Exams are important, but they should not be allowed to dominate life or to cause unhappiness.
  • Bullying can cause all of the above. Around 1 in 10 secondary school children is bullied at some point, about 1 in 20 is bullied every week. Short children are more likely to be bullied. If you are worried that this is happening, talk to the school to make sure that they enforce their bullying policy.

Trouble with the law

  • Most young people do not break the law, but those who do are usually boys. When they do, it usually only happens once.
  • If a parent doesn't feel that breaking the law is particularly important, it is more likely that their children will offend.
  • Unhappiness or distress can also lead to behaviour that will get them into trouble with the police. It is always worth asking about such feelings if an adolescent is repeatedly getting into trouble

Eating problems

  • Weight can be a real problem. If an adolescent is overweight and is criticised or made fun of, they are more likely to dislike themselves and to become depressed. This can lead to inactivity and comfort eating, which worsens the weight problem - dieting can actually aggravate the situation. It is more important to ensure that they feel happy with themselves, fat or thin.
  • Many adolescents diet. Fortunately, few will develop serious eating disorders - only around 1 in 100 teenagers develop anorexia, 1 in 50 have bulimia. However, these are more likely to occur in those who take up serious dieting, think very little of themselves, are under stress and who have been over-weight as a child.

Drugs, solvents and alcohol

  • Many teenagers experiment with alcohol and illegal drugs. Around 1 in 3 of 15 year olds in England have used drugs at some time .
  • Regular use of drugs or alcohol is much less common. Less than 1 in 100 of 11-12 year olds are regular users, but this increases to 1 in 6 of 15 year olds.
  • Although cannabis has been widely felt to be relatively harmless, there is now good evidence that it can make mental health problems worse in adolescence and can double the risk of developing schizophrenia.
  • Despite publicity about other drugs, alcohol is the most common drug to cause problems for adolescents.
  • You should consider the possibility of drug or alcohol use when you notice sudden or dramatic changes in behaviour.
  • Find out about any drugs your children may be using.
  • What if they ask about the drugs you used to use in your younger days? Honesty is generally the best policy, although it is probably worth stressing the differences in drugs available now. For example, much of the cannabis available today is many times stronger than was available 20 years ago, and we now know a lot more about its risks to both physical and mental health.

Abuse

  • Physical, emotional and sexual abuse may occur in adolescence and may cause many of the problems mentioned above.
  • Families with these problems need expert advice and should seek help.

Mental Illness

Much less often, changes in behaviour and mood can mark the beginning of more serious psychiatric disorders. Although uncommon, manic depression and schizophrenia may emerge for the first time during adolescent years. Extreme withdrawal may indicate schizophrenia, though there are usually other explanations for such behaviour. Parents who are concerned about these possibilities should ask to see their family doctor.

Parental shock

It can be surprisingly upsetting when your child has their first serious relationship, or you find out that they have started to have sex. For the first time in your life together, you are not the most important person to them. The sense of shock will pass, but you may need a while to adjust to the new state of affairs.

The Good News

  • Adolescence has had a bad press. However, recent studies have shown that most teenagers actually like their parents and feel that they get on well with them. It is a time when the process of growing up can help people to make positive changes, and to put the problems of the past behind them.
  • It is not just a difficult stage, although it can feel very much like it at times. The anxiety experienced by parents is more than matched by the periods of uncertainty, turmoil and unhappiness experienced by the adolescent.
  • Difficult times come and go, but most adolescents don't develop serious problems. It's worth remembering this when things are difficult.
  • Parents may sometimes start to feel that they have failed. However, whatever may be said in the heat of the moment, they play a crucial part in their children's lives. Helping your children grow through adolescence can be profoundly satisfying.
  • Child Psychology | Adolescent Psychology | Depression | Phobias | Relationships

Copyright 2006 Oshawa Psychological & Counselling Services