The Mel Robbins Podcast - How To Help Anyone In Your Life Who’s Struggling - Fantastic Strategies From A Yale-Educated Psychologist
Episode Date: May 18, 2023I am thrilled to share this conversation with you. It is packed with practical strategies that will help the people in your life who may be struggling. Dr. Lisa Damour is a clinical psychologist an...d author of three New York Times bestsellers. She earned degrees from both Yale and the University of Michigan and has more than 30 years of experience working with teens and families. Her latest book, The Emotional Lives of Teenagers, has been nothing short of life changing. Today you will learn… -five words you need to know when someone you love is struggling-the signs that tell you when someone is “costly coping”-what to say that will prevent a conversation from turning into a battle-why your kids dump all their emotional garbage on you-when it’s time for a therapist-why struggles are signs of being “mentally WELL”! I started using Dr. Lisa’s strategies with my family the moment we finished recording this episode. They work! You will leave this episode full of the resources you deserve. Plus, you’re going to love Dr. Damour (and how hopeful she makes you feel) as much as I do. Xo Mel And if you need to take the reins in your own life, sign up for my free Take Control mini-course to get inspiring support, guidance, and motivation. In this episode, you’ll learn: 4:00: Two things psychologists look for when assessing mental health.5:15: Too many people are not distinguishing between these qualities.6:15: When exactly IS adolescence?8:30: We’ve had the wrong idea about what it means to be mentally healthy.12:45: What’s the difference between a “normal” reaction vs one to be concerned about?15:10: Do you know someone who is managing by “costly coping.”16:45: So how do you help your kid?20:00: This is how you don’t turn a conversation with your child into a fight.24:00: Take these steps when it’s time to confront your teen.27:30: Here’s how I wish I’d handled Chris’s depression differently.30:20: Let’s look at the difference in emotions between genders.34:15: How do you help people in your life who just can’t let it go?39:00: Do your kids do this, too? It’s called the “defense of externalization.”41:40: This is how my own mother set me straight.44:00: How do you know when it’s time to get a therapist involved?46:30: Can’t find a therapist for your child? Use this resource.48:00: Here’s how the lockdown impacted our kids. 54:30: When are suicide thoughts normal and when are they concerning?58:00: What happened to our nervous system during this time?1:00:00: These are the concerns of Dr. Damour that we should watch for.1:01:30: When do healthy habits become an obsession?1:08:15: How do you let kids have emotions without letting them run the home?1:14:00: Here is the most important thing you can offer your teen. Disclaimer
Transcript
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Okay, so today you're going to meet an expert that I picked up the phone and called and begged
to come on the show because I've been getting email after email after comment asking for advice
on a very specific topic.
Mel, how do I help people in my life
who are struggling?
I'm sure it's on your mind.
I know it's on my mind.
We all know someone who is having a really hard time
right now in their lives or maybe even in life in general.
It might be your spouse, it could be a friend,
maybe it's a family member, or perhaps it's one of your kids.
So I tracked down the very best resource,
somebody that was a lifeline for me for years
as I was navigating all kinds of issues with our kids
as they were growing up.
And her advice has even been life changing
when my husband, Chris, was struggling with depression,
and I just wasn't sure what to do.
You may know her from her extraordinarily popular article in the New York Times motherload,
or you might know her from her three New York Times bestselling books.
Who am I talking about?
I'm talking about Dr. Lisa DeMore.
She's a clinical psychologist and New York Times bestselling author.
She has a PhD from the University of Michigan
and an undergraduate degree from Yale.
She is one of the world's leading experts
in parenting, education, childhood development,
stress and anxiety.
And she has been a real lifeline for me.
And this is not a conversation, by the way,
that's just about teenagers that are struggling.
Yes, we will talk about teenagers specifically, but this is a conversation that is going to
leave you feeling hopeful, empowered.
We are going to role play, different scenarios.
You're going to leave here knowing exactly what to do and what to say and not say to the
people in your life that are struggling.
Her latest book, The Emotional Lives of Teenagers is a must read.
This is a conversation I've been dying to have.
I am absolutely thrilled to introduce you and me to Dr. Lisa DeMore.
Welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Oh Mel, thanks so much for having me.
I'm so excited. I have so much I want to talk to you about.
I do have a confession.
You were a tow rope that dragged me up the hill of parenting teenage daughters because I was an
avid motherload reader and disciple. So thank you for your work. I mean, so much.
You have no idea what a difference it made. And when I saw that you were releasing yet another book,
your latest book, The Emotional Lives of Teenagers, I thought, oh wow, what was it that made you
want to write this latest book, Lisa? There were two things that really drove me to do it.
One was, of course, what teenagers went through
in the last several years.
And I've been practicing with adolescents for
coming on 30 years now.
I got my PhD 26 years ago,
and I was taking care of teenagers while I was in training.
And I've never seen anything like it.
I've never seen teenagers go through such a hard time.
The other force that got me to my computer to bang out this book
was that the way we talk about mental health as a culture
does not square with how we as psychologists understand it.
And what I mean by that is that so much of the discourse about mental health
suggests that being mental healthy means feeling good or calm or relaxed or at ease.
And those are all good things, but those do not actually factor into how psychologists
assess mental health.
And when we're looking at it, we're looking for two things.
Do the feelings fit the circumstance?
And are they managed well?
So we expect to see distress. You know, if somebody gets
dumped in a romance, we expect sadness. We expect them to be really, you know, heartbroken and
maybe bitter and a little angry. Like those are all appropriate emotions. What we're really
interested in is what does the kid do next, right? Do they weave? Do they talk to their friends?
Do they get their ice cream? Like do they do things to help themselves feel better, or do they trash that kid online, do they turn it against
themselves, do they smoke a ton of weed, right? Like, we only worry when we're in that second
category of unhealthy coping. That's what we're most interested in. Well, what's immediately striking to me is that this applies to people of
all ages, right? Absolutely. That what I have noticed is that people's ability to tolerate
uncomfortable emotions and the ups and downs in life have gotten way worse over time. It's true. I think we have run into a situation where for too many people uncomfortable feels
like unmanageable. That there's not a distinction between those two. And it's an important distinction
because discomfort is part of life and teenagers are going to feel it, adults are going
to feel it and it's important and we want to care for people under those conditions.
But we don't want to assume that discomfort means
that everything must stop, and it cannot be managed.
Some people find themselves there.
And then we have the full force of our clinical supports
that we can bring to that.
But those are two very different things.
I want to break apart the two reasons why you wrote the book.
One being the impact when March 2020 dropped like a bomb on all of us and everybody's
lives got turned upside down.
You write extensively about the specific impact that it had on the lives of teenagers.
And just for the sake of this conversation, when you say teenager, what age group are you talking about?
It's a critically important question. So, adolescence begins at 11. And this is something
that psychologists have done a terrible job of getting out to the public. Most people think
they're a teen because they hear teen at the end of that and they think teenager, we have always
marked the onset of adolescence at age 11.
And that is because adolescence begins when puberty is underway and by 11, most kids,
even if you can't see it on the outside, they are underway with puberty.
And we mark the end of adolescence.
You can push it as far as 24, 25.
You can hear the asterisk in my voice on that. By and large, their brains are in
great shape, very fully developed by 1819-20, but their better reasoning is still more
readily knocked off line until they're about 2425. So if they're very, very stirred up,
young adults don't always handle things as well as they will, you know, after 24, 25.
But I always get a little uncomfortable when people are like, oh, their brains are not
developed until they're 24, 25.
I'm like, well, but like, look at that English paper, that kid wrote.
Look at that beautiful piece of art that kid made.
Like, that's a developed brain.
But we're talking a big window here.
I mean, 11 to 24 or 25.
I mean, those are very, very wide range of numbers and very different kinds of people
filling in that space.
Yes.
Okay.
Good.
I'm so glad we started there because I also honestly would lump in adults that are
emotionally mature and has never matured in terms of their emotional processing,
but I'm glad that we're talking really the range of early middle school all the way through
year through college.
And we're going to go step by step in just a minute around how the world turning upside
down and going into lockdown and all of the isolation and complicated
feelings that happen, how it impacted this age group specifically.
But I want to talk first about the second reason why you wrote the book because this applies
to all of us.
What you're saying is that there's a difference between what you know clinically and what people believe is the baseline that
mental health does not mean be happy.
What does it mean to be mentally well?
What it means is that the emotions you have are actually in concert with what's happening
in your world.
And I think that mental health is often defined by experiencing distress. And that
is so, that is 180 from where the culture is right now. So often, mental health concerns
and distress are treated as though they are one and the same. But I'll give you several
examples. It's so easy of where the presence of distress is actually evidence of mental
health, right? So if the kid gets dumped, we expect distress.
The absence of it would be concerning.
If a teenager has a huge test tomorrow and they have not started studying,
we want to see some anxiety.
The absence of anxiety is more concerning than the presence of anxiety.
If someone's really mean to you, right?
If you're a teenager or an adult and someone's really mean to you, we expect to see
hurt and then probably a self-protective anger.
Those are all unpleasant emotions.
Those are all unwanted emotions.
Those are evidence that we work exactly as we should.
And so to pathologize all of that means that people are spending their normal, healthy
days feeling like there's something wrong with them, when
in fact that distress is proof that they work perfectly.
Lisa, you're a genius.
I just had this huge breakthrough because you're right.
We have just painted with such a broad stroke that guilt, fear, shame, anger, upset, heartbreak, that somehow that
makes you weak.
When what you're actually saying is, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
If it's occurring in reaction to the appropriate situation, that is a sign that you're mentally
well.
Absolutely.
And it's also data. That's the other way we think about
all of our feelings, negative and positive. They tell us how things are going. So every time you
have lunch with somebody, you walk away feeling kind of stepped on and diminished, that's really
good data. Don't have lunch with that person if you can help it, right? And if you go to a job
interview and it feels just thrilling to be in the space, like,
that's good data.
Emotions, psychologists are surprisingly agnostic about that.
Like, we don't really value positive ones over negative ones.
It's just all information.
And our job is to take it in.
Well, I love this reframe.
I absolutely love it.
I would love to tease this out a little bit more because I think this applies to all
of us.
It does.
And I want to hear a quick word from our sponsors because they're bringing us this incredible
information at zero cost, but when we return, Dr. Lisa, I have a question for you.
How do you know when it's just a normal upsetting
or distressing emotion versus something
that you actually should be concerned about?
We're gonna answer that when we return.
Don't go anywhere. Welcome back. I'm Mel Robbins, and I am here with Dr. Lisa DeMore, one of the world's leading experts
in parenting, education, childhood development, stress, and anxiety.
And we are getting a master class in how to deal with distressing emotions, how to know
when things are a real problem, and we're about to dive into the tools, tactics, and scripts
that you can use to help somebody that you love who's struggling.
So Lisa, what is a normal emotion and what's not?
I guess what I mean by that question is, how do we tell the difference between something that is just an awful situation
where you got to ride the wave versus something that we should be concerned about.
So there's a few ways. I mean, part of it is there's no real right feeling, right? You have the
feelings you have. And I think that I would never want to say, you know, we always expect to see
this feeling under these circumstances because of course our feelings are informed by who we are,
our histories, you know, what's come before. So there's not always a perfect map of what we expect to see. And here again,
psychologists can just usually just take a much more curious, like borderline anthropological
stance towards emotion as opposed to judging or valuing. But here's what we don't want
to see. We don't want to see emotions getting in the way of people's lives.
That's where we start to be concerned.
So we fully expect to see sadness under sad conditions.
We don't expect to see depression, which is where mood becomes so low that it really casts
a pall over everything in a person's life.
We fully expect to see anxiety if there's something wrong, right? If there's,
you know, danger around you or a lethal virus in the environment, right? We expect to see anxiety,
but we don't expect anxiety to become paralyzing and get in the way of people's ability to do the
things that really are safe or they can and should be able to do. So for us, the index is really much more about functioning
and do emotions undermine the ability to function well in the world because they should be
supporting our ability to navigate our lives and deepen our relationships. They shouldn't be getting
in the way. So the real takeaway here for all of us is that distressing emotion.
It is part of being mentally well.
But when you start opting out of seeing friends and you stop the hygiene protocol of taking
showers and exercising and eating or you start over-medicating your feelings with alcohol
or weed or whatever, that's the
red flag.
That's right.
I'm going to even tease that apart a little bit more.
So the emotion is going to either get in the way, right?
So mood that actually disturbs the ability to live one's life, or, and you moved in this
direction in such a critically important direction, what I would call costly coping.
So people are coping with moods, but they're doing it in ways that come at a cost.
So either abusing substances or being incredibly hard on the people around them, or turning
it against themselves, whether they're running themselves down or even engaging in self-harm,
those may be actually providing some relief. People only do things that actually work for
them. But they come with a price tag.
So that's the other thing we look for.
So we look for a mood that gets in the way
of the ability to live one's life
or coping that is a costly way to go about things
if not immediately, certainly over time.
Those are the flags that we keep an eye out for.
I got it, two flags, mood and costly coping,
and I want to roleplay for a little bit, if that's cool.
Because I love to leave our audience in action and empowered.
So if you're in a situation where let's just talk about
the costly coping stuff that you talked about.
I can't tell you how many parents and friends
we would confide in one another during the
last three years.
My kids are completely off the rows, like they're not even showing up for the Zoom classes.
My son is hitting the vape, smoking weed, playing video games for six hours a day.
I don't even care anymore.
The stress level is so high as long as they're waking up in the morning and they're not
mean to me, how do you as a parent or a friend or a partner of somebody,
you see somebody smoking too much weed,
playing video games for too long.
Those sort of coping mechems,
they write, let you escape.
How do you even begin to approach it?
Because every time we would approach it in our household,
you get the big shove back.
So I think the first step is to really recognize that it is working for that person, that it
is serving a purpose.
And you describe that, right?
That substances can help numb distress.
They're incredibly effective at that.
That's the problem with them, right?
Is that they work to make pain go away.
Oh my gosh. hold on a second.
Can I just stop there?
I don't know that I've ever heard anybody, ever.
Hit the pause button and tell the truth,
that people engage in these behaviors because they work for them,
which is why they become so damn defensive
when you try to take them away from them.
Exactly.
Wow!
You know, this is where I just, I'm so glad
I got the training I did when I did,
because the premise of my whole training
is that humans are rational actors.
They don't do things that don't serve a purpose.
Even if those things outwardly end up
causing so much trouble, there's always a rationale and that's the actually the
best part about my job is that when people come my way clinically, my job is to
figure out, you know, you're doing this thing that is just damaging your life
and getting in the way. We have to understand why so that you then
can feel like you've got some choices.
Wow.
I'm just letting the profound nature of what you're asking us to do because I can think
of several friends who had daughters in particular, self-harm, cutting, very self-destructive behavior,
and from the outside you look at it and you panic,
and then you make it wrong,
and you'd wanna do anything
because you love this person to stop it.
But I think it means that we're missing
this critical step in connecting,
which helps us lead to the problem solving.
So why is it so important, even though it's terrifying when your kid is hurting themselves
or they're clearly escaping and addicted?
Why is it so important to say to yourself, this is a coping mechanism that's working for
my kid and I actually have to start there.
Here's why it's so important because the alternative is a dead end. And what I mean by that
is that if you commit a kid or anyone saying you need to stop and then fill in the blank.
you need to stop and then fill in the blank.
What you're going to run into is a part of them that is like,
you don't get why this is working for me.
And now you have a conflict.
If you go the route of saying,
you're a smart kid, you wouldn't be doing this if it wasn't working for you
at some level. The conflict ends up in the kid or the adult that you're trying to
help between the part of them that doesn't want to be cutting or abusing substances
or playing video games eight hours a day. Or running around and sleeping with the wrong people,
which is what I was doing in high school, but okay.
I mean, whatever it takes to help yourself feel better,
so there's a part of them
that doesn't want to be doing those things,
and there's a part of them that is doing those things.
And the job of the helpful outsider
is to try to get a conflict going
between those two parts of the person who is doing the thing
and to stick up for the side that wants to be healthier. I'll tell you the language that
I remember when I learned this as a clinician around if a client comes in and is talking about
suicide, right, which is of course terrifying. And I remember the day I learned
the language from a senior clinician to say to someone, listen, clearly part of
you is really thinking about hurting yourself, but part of you wants help, and
that's the part that's telling me that you're having those thoughts. I'm gonna
stick up for the part of you that wants help. And that's how you don't turn it into a fight.
That's incredible.
And I've got a pen in my hand.
So this is one of those conversations where I'm having
a conversation and furiously scribbling notes, which I don't
know why I have to do that, given that I can listen to this
again. There's a part of you that is
really considering this, or there's a part of you that is in so much pain that you're resorting
to cutting to feel alive, or you're in so much pain that you're smoking dope so that you can just
numb out and forget about it. But there's a part of you that wants
help. And that's the part of you that I'm speaking to. Did I get that right? Yeah, you just say,
you wouldn't be letting you know if you didn't want help. There's a part of you that want to help.
What do you do if they didn't tell you or you don't? You know what I mean? Because a lot of times
particularly with these behaviors, people hide them.
It's true.
So eventually, you find out, or you smell the weed coming
out of their room, or you notice that a young person
has harmed themself.
So I think the first thing we want to do
as the helpful people who are trying to step in
is to get to a place with ourselves
where we feel a bit centered.
Reacting strongly in those moments does not go well.
But then I think it does sometimes happen that you have to confront a person about their
behavior.
And again, I think teaming up with them and teaming up with what I know all teenagers have and all adults have, which
is that growth-giving, health-seeking side, is the way to go.
So I think, um, you know, let's just use marijuana as an example and you can smell it.
I'll be the kid.
Okay.
Ooh, I can't wait for this.
I want to hear a quick word from our sponsors.
I can already feel you, Dr. Lisa, outside the door, and I'm the kid in the bedroom
rolling up the joint, okay? But we're gonna take a quick break. Our sponsors bring us all of this,
it's here, or cost you, so I want to give them your time and attention, and when we come back,
Dr. Lisa's gonna be knocking on my door while I light up a duty. Don't go anywhere. Welcome back.
I'm with New York Times bestselling author,
Dr. Lisa DeMore, and we're about to role play here.
Me, I'm the weed smoke and teen,
sitting in my bedroom, no clue that mom stand on outside,
and Dr. Lisa, she is going to play the role
of the calm, centered parent and walk us through step by step how you and I are supposed to
handle these kinds of stressful situations. Here we go. Okay. So I'm sitting in my room.
I'm teenage male. I'm rolling up a big doobie. I'm lighting it up. I'm puffing away. I don't
even know my mom's outside. I'm listening to music, I'm texting my friends, I got my
headphones on, I don't know that you're home because I didn't even hear the garage doors
open.
So there I am.
Okay.
And here I come.
So knock knock on the door, no answer, so I let myself in.
Oh, right.
And I say, oh, buddy, oh, buddy, you and I both know that smoking weed like this is going
to get in the way of the kind of life you want to lead.
We got to figure out what's getting in the way if you make in different choices.
Whoa.
Like, you just spoke to a different part of me.
That's the goal, right?
That's the goal.
Now, do you leave the room?
Do you just drop it like a grenade and then let that kind of settle for them or do you sit
down on the bed?
Like, because I think we just don't know what to do.
And then we get so emotionally so that we react, which makes it worse.
Well, I think I'd see what the kid does.
I mean, I'd sort of take the cue from them. I think I'd see what the kid does.
I mean, I'd sort of take the cue from them,
I mean, because he just did say something.
I think we also have to give kids room to come
to where we are, right?
I mean, I think it's so hard and parenting so often.
And I have two teenagers myself, right?
So often, in parenting, we have a full head of steam.
They walk in the door, and I'm like,
we need to talk about boom, right?
And the kids like, whoa.
Like, I was gonna go get a snack, right?
I was not ready for this conversation.
So I think-
Plus, now I'm high, mom.
And my tongue feels like it's filled my mouth.
I can't have a conversation.
I can't have a conversation.
So then I think, let's just say for the sake of argument,
like this isn't a great time to have the conversation
because the kid is not entirely available to it.
And then I think you say, you know,
we're gonna have to have a conversation
about what's happening here.
And my favorite phrase,
and I also remember the moment I learned this
in my training is,
because what we're doing isn't working.
What you're doing isn't working, right?
And that's the thing about substance
is they do get to a place
where they start to undermine a person's life.
You know, that they're not showing up at school
or they're under functioning academically or they aren't actually maintaining
friendships or they're, you know, not contributing to the home or the community. And so that
becomes the thing, like, you can't keep doing this because what you're doing isn't working,
we have to come up with something else. So if you're in so much pain that you're doing
this, we're going to find another way for you to address that pain.
But the goal, and you can hear this in every approach, is to not turn it into a showdown between the person who's trying to help and the person they want to help.
It just had this visual of kind of that, you're right, it is a showdown, the knock on the door, the screaming, the shame,
the this, so now you're like putting your 40 or 50 year old angst about this onto your 16 year old,
and it just compounds everything that they're trying to escape anyway. If you can center yourself
and realize you're trying to get on the same page with the part of them that wants to do better.
Instead of pounding on the door, I've literally like putting your arm around them.
You know, like, buddy, I love that you're like, hey, buddy, you know, and I love this.
I wish I had talked to you two years ago because that what you're doing isn't working.
When my husband's depression came to a head, I was the bitch on the door knocking.
I was trying to say what you're doing isn't working.
And instead, of course, I'm like, thank God you're doing yoga and all this stuff because
you probably be dead if you weren't.
But you got to start that, that, that, that, that, that, you like, you got to get in therapy
and you got to take, because, but what I, what I wish I would have known and what I hope
everybody's taking away is that phrase, what you're doing isn't working.
We got to do something else.
And I'll tell you about, so when I was in training,
I had a really brilliant and terrifying supervisor.
And she said to me, you get eight words in an utterance.
When you're listening and sitting with a client,
they can say as much as they wanna say,
you can't go past eight words.
And the reason for this is as soon as you're past eight words, you're into somebody's head,
you've bypassed their heart, right?
But if you can keep it tight, and if you can go to the core of it, in eight words or
fewer, it lands.
And so what's interesting is that discipline of needing to find just the arrow and the
through line.
That's how I've ended up actually being able to translate over into writing and podcasting
and you know all of the other forms of work I do because if you're doing good clinical work, you're just going for the central message as cleanly and as easily
understood as possible.
I love how you simplified this for us.
You have really drawn this highlighter and
highlighted the notion that distress is a really important part of being mentally
well.
And it's only when it becomes destructive to your mood and your daily functioning or you
start having costly coping mechanisms that we got to sound the alarm, so to speak, because
what they're doing is working for them to escape or cope,
but it's not helping.
And you are like an arrow hitting the target.
Lisa, like this is your genius,
that your job is to appeal to the greater part of them.
What you're doing isn't working.
And I'm here to help you figure out what could work. Exactly.
Wow. What you also write in your latest bestseller, the emotional lives of teenagers, that there is a
difference with how the different genders cope with stress. Can you walk us through that? Sure.
Let me say a whole bunch of caveats first.
From any time we're looking at gender findings, we're looking at huge numbers.
There's tremendous overlap between the genders.
And then, of course, we've only really studied conventional genders.
Male-female, we are soon at the table to study kids who do not fit into one of the traditional categories.
So everything I'm saying needs to sort of decouched in that broader understanding of how we
do the research and what we've studied.
So having said that, when we look at traditional gender categories, a pretty consistent, broad
finding is that when they are in distress, girls are more likely to discuss and boys are
more likely to distract.
And these are both acceptable forms of managing emotions.
There's actually nothing wrong with either.
But where we see trouble is if you veer to the extreme or you use that strategy all the
time.
Can you give us an example of what you mean by disgust or distracts, so we kind of have
a knowing and then also what's sort of within range of helpful coping?
Absolutely.
And what gets to be on the fringe?
Absolutely.
So disgust, you know, so let's say a girl, someone's mean to her at school.
And she goes and finds her best friend.
And she's like, ah, you're not going to believe what so
and so just did.
She was so, you know, such a jerk to me.
And her friends say, oh, man, she is such a jerk.
And I love you.
And you're fine.
And you're cool.
OK, yay.
Like, good outcome.
We like that.
We could also have a boy where someone's a jerk to him
at school.
And he's upset by it.
And he doesn't want to
talk about it.
But he goes home and he plays basketball for a little while, blows off steam, gets it out
of his system, gets past it, lets it go, moves on.
Those are two perfectly reasonable outcomes of those two different strategies. What we don't want to see is girls who then,
they discuss it with their friend
and then they end up in a three hour conversation
discussing it with their friend
and then they are doing the, you know,
like critical analysis of the text thread
with the girl who was mean
and then four of the girls hop in on this.
There's two problems with this.
One is girls are more likely than boys
to engage in vicarious distress,
meaning if my friends upset, now I'm upset too.
So it has this like widening swath of distress.
The other thing is that it threatens to turn
into what psychologists call rumination,
though it's kind of gross,
it's really helpful metaphor.
It's like picking at an emotional wound, right?
The more you talk about it, the worse it gets.
It's not healing up, better to just leave it alone.
So we don't wanna see that extreme.
And if we go down the boy, stereotype,
what we don't wanna see is that, you know,
every time this kid has something that feels bad,
he just shuts down, goes plays basketball
or hops on his video game and just stays in this distracted
place until the feeling dies down enough that he can tolerate it.
Because the cost to him is number one, he's not getting the kind of social support he
deserves, right?
Nobody knows what he's in pain.
Number two, he's not actually developing the fluency in verbalizing emotions that we'd
like to see.
The part of what happens if we go down these boy-girl paths is that girls get better and better
and better at talking about feelings because they practice it all the time.
And boys can get worse and worse and worse at talking about feelings because they're not practicing it
with one another especially.
So the ideal management is somewhere in between, a little discussing, a little distracting, or any variety of other strategies that help to tame or express emotions.
We just don't want to see anybody leaning too hard on one strategy.
These are so relatable, and I know so many people in our family and also friends who we're
going to start with the kind of
Rumination side and I'm sure this goes for adults too. You have those people in your life that can't let it go
They're still talking about the divorce and it's been final for three years
they're still complaining about the
What happened when mom died and who got what and like just holding on to it.
How do you approach that with somebody?
So I think that let me do the girl example version and then let's go right down the
elimination road.
So what I encourage parents and also peers to do if they're caring for a teenager who is really
spending their wheels, spending their wheels.
Is too say to them, listen, talking about feelings usually helps, but what I'm noticing is the
more we're talking the worse you feel.
So let's do this.
Let's put a pen in this.
Let's make a plan to talk about it tomorrow.
What time do you have?
What time do I have? We'll like schedule it.
We're coming back to it.
But between now and then, let's just do something else.
Let's go think about something else.
Let's just take a mental vacation from this situation.
And what is extraordinary?
Is it so often when you do that?
When I've met with that kid the next day
or talked to the person the next day,
they're
like, yeah, I don't know what I was so upset about.
Just the space alone, the time alone, brings it down to size.
And they're no longer dumping stress hormones into their bloodstream.
For that 24 hours, they're not thinking about it.
So it helps people to find their feet.
So that's a short term, something that just popped up.
I think there's probably a different answer for those bigger questions around, you know,
people who are struggling to let go of a painful divorce or struggling to let go of how things
went down in the family, in the wake of a parent's death.
And my hunch is for that, there's just a lot of meaning to what occurred that has not
really been examined or researched.
Profest.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What about with the boys?
How do you approach that?
You know, where or any behavior of just distraction and kind of literally losing yourself
in something.
So you don't have to face the pain of the situation and the emotions that you're feeling.
So it's interesting distraction can end up as costly coping,
right?
We can go right back to that category, which is, you know,
so say your boys had a really rough day
and his strategy is to play video games for eight hours.
Okay, well, he may have gotten past the rough day,
but now he has a new problem
because he hasn't done his homework
and he needs to go to bed, right?
I mean, it creates its own, you know, side effects. So one way to take it up is just from that side of saying,
look, I get it that you may have had a rough day and playing some video games helps you get through it.
You can't be doing this so much that you now have a new situation to deal with. Is there a
way you could help yourself feel better? Now, the thing here about boys and expression, right?
Like, that's really what's underneath this, is getting kids, but a boys in particular,
to talk about feelings, is that there's a lot caught up in why they don't talk about
feelings.
And I would say it's one of the hardest things in parenting that I hear about is parents
of adolescent boys in particular who become very, very sphinx-like. Let's say it's one of the hardest things in parenting that I hear about is parents of
adolescent boys in particular who become very, very sphinx-like, very, very reserved.
And I think that's its own fascinating and complex universe to make sense of.
I think that's its whole 45-minute conversation, don't you?
It's a big one.
It's a big one and it's an important one and it can be done.
But I'll just, for now, I'll just say,
expression of emotion takes a lot of forms and it's not always in language.
And what I've really become much better at is honoring that there are healthy ways
of boys express emotion, but it's not always in words.
Though I also wish they were more often talking about what they were feeling.
Speaking of expressing themselves, one of the things that I learned in this book that
was just life changing, I wish I had known this 10 years ago
it's a word
that explained my entire experience of raising teenage daughters
which is externalization
and the fact that and it still happens today I we joke in our family Lisa and you may have as you're hearing me
Explain this you probably have somebody in your life who does this. They emotionally dump on me.
So I've realized that when our daughters want a chat, they call my husband and they have
wonderful conversations about their life and what's going on and their relationships
and what they need, help with, and bop, bop, bop, bop, bop.
When there is any kind of upsetting or distressing situation,
I will get three phase time calls in a row until I pick up.
I get the tears, the venting, the frustration,
the world is ending, da, da, da, da, da, da,
and then it's all done.
They go back to their life
and I feel like somebody has thrown a bucket
of slime on top of me.
And now, of course, I'm all worked up and your research shows that this is normal and
it has a name.
This is normal behavior.
In teenagers, it's actually one of the very few things that is especially organized around
adolescence is the use of the, we call it the defense of externalization.
And Mel, I have a story, I have such a vivid memory
of being a freshman in college myself
and I grew up in Colorado and I went to college
in Connecticut and I remember doing this to my mom.
Like I remember getting around the phone.
Yeah, you did too, right?
And so, and I remember calling her and be like,
I don't know, I don't really like it here.
I don't really have any friends.
I'm not sure I'm gonna make it. I don't know. Then I see my roommate and I be like, I don't know, I don't really like it here, I don't really have any friends, I'm not sure I'm gonna make it, I don't know.
Then I see my roommate, I'm like, I gotta go.
Right away, I go to the phone.
I go out with my roommate, have a super good time.
And I remember my mom called me the next day
and she's like, are you okay?
And I'm like, yeah, I don't know what your problem is,
but I'm fine.
And my dad told me later, like, she'd been up all night.
I mean, she was getting ready to pack the cooler and drive across the plains to retrieve
me. So this is not a new maneuver. Teenagers have forever and always done this. It's not
a fun maneuver for parents, for sure, but it is also really hard to be a teenager. And
they have a lot of big, powerful emotions. And I think sometimes the way they get through their day is to conveniently dump them, treat
them like emotional trash on the people who love them and are willing to collect their
trash.
And having discarded the trash, what we often find as parents is the kids don't want to
talk about it.
They're like, no, no, no, no, I've dumped the trash.
Don't ask me about it.
I'm not going to answer your texts.
I'm not going to pick up your phone calls.
Like, just take the trash and make it go away.
That's unbelievable.
You're exactly right,
because on the receiving end of it,
I feel like they've dumped the trash on me.
I'm waited down, I'm worried about it,
I'm thinking about it.
I just had a sleepless night, the other night,
because of something that one of our daughters
is going through.
And then I spoke to her in the morning,
she's like, oh, that's fine.
I mean, I don't know.
And as if nothing happened, I'm like, excuse me.
I should have taped the conversation
so you heard the Defcon 10 bomb that you dropped on me.
And I should probably apologize,
Lisa, to my mom, because I would call her every day
from the pay phone in my dorm hallway at Dermoth. Collect to cry
and complain. I don't like it here. I don't know anybody here. Everybody always has their
friends here. And it got so bad after two weeks of this that my mom said, you either hang
up the fucking phone and don't call me again and get out there and make some friends. Or
I'm coming to pick you up the next time you call me and you will come back
home and you'll go to the community college and that'll be that I never called
her again. But then our daughters both that same scenario, the first couple
weeks of school, just processing the hard emotion. But it's so liberating to
hear that it's normal. And so should we just
kind of let the trash fly and kind of step out of the way and not feel like we have to collect
it, just let them litter. Yes. And I think that if you're worried in this interaction, you can say
to your kid, do you want my help or do you just need to vent? And that is often, if they say, I just need to vent, which is overwhelmingly
what they are looking for.
What I would say is visualize yourself
opening an emotional garbage bag, right?
And just let them unload all of that garbage into the bag.
And then when the call is over, dispose of it, right?
Don't carry it around.
Don't take it to bed with you.
I just feel like
that was a garbage collection moment and the kid needed a place to dump the garbage and I am
as the loving person in their life willing to collect their garbage. But yeah, you don't need to
then go through the trash yourself. You could have saved me years in marriage counseling because I
feel like a lot of the times that my husband and I then are at odds about is my stress
about what the kids have just externalized by handing me their emotional garbage and his ability to just either
not be
bothered by it, not worried about it. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for writing about that. One final question about
this, when do you know it's time to get a therapist involved? And how do you look for one,
the right one? So I think we would go back to what we're doing isn't working.
Okay. And we're not able to find another way. You know, that the
things we're trying aren't helping, right? Because nobody starts at a therapist, right?
They try at home to make things better. Yeah. And so I think if you feel like we thought
of everything we can, what we're doing isn't working, our kid is not better enough, our
kid is still suffering, that's when it's a great time to get help.
And I think that's really critically important.
I think one thing when we talk about teenagers and therapy, one thing that I always like to
remember, teenagers worry that there's something wrong with them.
Almost universally, this is a worry that teenagers carry.
And it's because being a teenager is a very disregulating and very disorganizing experience.
Their emotions become very intense the way their brain works changes.
And so I think it's true that a lot of teenagers harbor a secret concern that there's something
wrong with them.
And so when it comes time to suggest that they should be in therapy, we have to do it carefully
because I think if you just say like, you know what, you need to talk to a pro, right?
Then the kids like, oh my gosh, like this is exactly like my secret concern is now, you
know, confirmed.
So I always am very careful about how I approach it, even when I know it's the right recommendation.
And I will tend to say to teenagers, listen, for what you are up against, you deserve way
more support than you have.
And we need to get someone who actually knows what they're doing
to help support you through this.
Then it's just a tiny shift that can make an enormous difference.
Then there's the issue of finding somebody.
And this is hard.
And part of what's hard about it is there's just not a lot of clinicians
who specialize in caring for teenagers.
And one thing that really never got discussed
in the broad conversation about the adolescent mental health
crisis, there were two reasons for that crisis.
One, what teenagers went through that really increased
their suffering at a very fast pace.
And the other, everyone who cares for teenagers
was already full in their practice before March 2020.
And so we're not really in a position to scale up the workforce of people who care for
teenagers very quickly.
It takes a long time actually to become trained at it.
And so that was really where things ended up in a bad place is that the need accelerated
and the workforce to address the need cannot be scaled up at that pace.
So finding a clinician is hard.
It was hard before March 2020, it's hard now.
It's getting a little better.
What I would say is in my experience, pediatricians are actually a really good resource.
They know your kid, they know the local talent in terms of psychotherapy.
They are often good at doing a good match between your kid and who they know in the
community. They can sometimes help facilitate making an appointment happen. And so that's usually
my generic advice is ask your pediatrician who they like. That is so hopeful and so accessible.
And I really appreciate that answer because it's something anybody can do, and it makes a lot of sense.
Let's pivot to this accelerating mental health crisis that we are reading about, we are experiencing.
Lisa, I don't have a single friend who doesn't have a family member, who is spiraling. And all through the kind of lockdown and, you know, coming out of the last three years,
it doesn't feel like a new normal.
It feels like there is something that's been bubbling underneath the surface.
And if it hasn't already erupted with the young people in your life. It feels like everybody is very tender.
And so I would love for you to talk about what you've seen
and what your concerns are about what
and how this age group, 11 to 25 roughly,
experienced the last three years social isolation and lockdown.
Well, let's look at it this way. Teenagers have two jobs. Their jobs are to become increasingly
independent and to spend as much time with their friends as possible. Those jobs were made impossible
Those jobs were made impossible by what they went through. And I'll tell you Mel, I saw a wide range of responses.
A few kids, but this isn't a sign that this was a good thing.
We're glad to be home.
Very, very small minority of kids felt some relief under lockdown, but we now have the
reality that they do need to return to the world
at large, and that's harder than it was before. Most kids just suffered through it,
found their way one way or another while feeling miserable. I mean, they were miserable.
And you know, miserable in all of its variety,
you know, some incredibly anxious about what was happening
with their social lives, some unable to do school in 2D.
That is its own like fascinating universe of kids
who were otherwise very strong students.
And I saw several of these.
Really, as long as they were in a bricks and mortar school,
could do school.
And as soon as it was collapsed into a 2D space,
we're actually incapable.
And it got me thinking, you know,
this is, you can hear I get excited
about the phenomenology of this.
Like it got me thinking about,
oh, we never knew that so much of what kids,
have some kids organized at school
was moving physically from room to room. So I must be
in this class now because I'm sitting next to the kid. I said next to in this class, I'm going to
focus on this class. Or that they knew that it was time to get out their notebook because everyone
around them was getting out their notebook. Or they knew that it was time to start writing down
notes because they're noticing people doing it. I just became completely fascinated by all of these
it. I just became completely fascinated by all of these ancillary supports that we had never thought about because we had never been put in a position to think about. And I
watched kids who really were incredibly strong academically, crater. I mean, absolutely,
completely unable to do school. There were also kids who could do school, they just hated it and they did it and they hated it. So we saw all of that. And then at the other far limit,
and unfortunately we saw way too many kids in this area, I saw kids entirely derailed, right,
who developed horrifying eating disorders, who were smoking so much weed that it really
probably changed their developmental trajectory, at least for a while, who ended up in just rip-roaring social conflicts that I think were
completely to deal with boredom and partly out of desperation and partly out of who knows what.
I will tell you, Mel, and you know from having read my work, like I am generally, you know,
kids are resilient, it's all good.
We'll find our way through this.
And I still believe that, but I can tell you having been a practicing clinician for a
long time before 2020, March, and then post the stories I hear now of kids derailing are
just much, much more extreme than what I used to hear.
And that part is alarming to me.
And I don't get alarmed very easily.
Wow, what do we need to know?
Because what we saw, which is very interesting,
is we saw a lot of grief because our daughters were in the middle of their college
experience.
And so there was like daily ricocheting emotion about, are we going back?
Are we not going back?
Who's going back?
Am I going to live off like all of that stuff?
And then all of those sort of milestones of graduation or prom or all of these things that people look forward to
or just expected being ripped away.
And so I saw a lot of that.
And I also have lots of friends whose kids just opted out of school who started smoking
pot, who became incredibly rebellious, who became
super depressed, eating disorders, retriggered.
And so I think we've all, if it's not happened in our family, we have somebody close to
us who is going through it.
What do you want us first of all to know about how not being able to do the two things you're supposed to do,
which is become more independent and spend more time with your friends.
How does that impact a child developmentally?
I think the best language for this is to think in terms of delay, not loss, though there's
a lot of loss.
And what your daughter's, they lost elements of college
that they're never getting back.
And I think that needs to be acknowledged
as exactly what it is.
But in terms of developing a sense of independence,
finding one's path and one's interests,
developing one's peer relationships,
and increasing reliance on peer relationships
and moving out into the pure world, we just have to accept that there's a delay in that.
And there's no getting around the fact that there's a delay. I really do think the development
is like the most powerful force in the world and kids will find their way back onto a trajectory
that works for them. I really do know that humans as a group
bend towards health, but sometimes I think it's hard for us to accept that there are delays.
And I have sometimes found myself in conversations where people are hand-ranging about, you know,
how kids look academically, you know, which we are still seeing the aftermath academically.
And I say to them, okay, but wouldn't it be so weird if kids didn't go to school for a year and a half and they came back
and we saw no impact from that. We would have been thinking like, what have we been doing all this
time requiring them to show up for school? So we just have to say they're gonna be delayed because
they missed out. And that language I think is better than a lost language.
I also think we got to look for the big stuff. So we had talked about suicide
ality. Let's just hit it head on because there's, yeah, it's the scariest thing.
So it is true now that thoughts of suicide are actually not rare, that I don't have the statistics
at my fingertips. But I know that when we've looked, you know, before 2000,
you know, we would take surveys of adolescence and the frequency with which they'd, you know,
the thought had crossed their mind. And it's not. And I remember being a teenager. And
like one time my mom and I read a fight and I was like, Oh, wouldn't she? Couldn't if
I hurt myself right now, she'd feel so bad, right? So did I think about it? Yes, was I was I myself close to doing it? No, right?
So I do want people to know that
If you have a worry
About a teenager or anybody in your life around questions of whether they are suicidal
What we recommend a psychologist is you just have to ask you you have to ask. And here's how I would have you do it.
I would say to the person, listen, I need to ask you a question and this may feel out of the blue, you know, something like that.
But because of, and then you tell them why, right?
You don't just ask randomly. You say because you've been in your room for a day and a half or you have not seemed like yourself or you were so upset about that thing.
I need to ask, have you had any thoughts of harming yourself
or ending your life? And the reason we're reluctant to do this is we're afraid we're going to give
the person the idea. That's a concern. We know that's not a concern. But we do know when we have
researched adolescence is if a teenager is thinking about suicide, they're glad you asked.
So I think we start with the scariest thing
and how to address the scariest thing.
And then we can go think down the line
of more manageable concerns.
But that is the one we just have to address very directly.
Thank you.
And it was very reassuring to hear the research
that teenagers are just glad you asked.
They're glad you asked.
Yeah, we did an episode with our 18-year-old son now
where he disclosed to me on the episode,
I did not know that this was the case,
that he had big scary thoughts like that freshman year.
And I had no idea.
Yeah.
And so one of the things that was interesting about it
is he was pretty surprised to learn
that it is frequent and normal to have a thought like that.
And there's a big difference between having a thought and actually wanting it to happen.
And that they do come and go and they do go away.
And it doesn't mean you're at the end of the end, but even just talking about it made
him feel better. And so I love that you just gave us permission based on the research to just ask and they will
feel better, even if they thought I didn't even cross our mind. Thank you for checking in.
I would love for you to help us understand some of the issues that you've seen coming out of this
that you've seen coming out of this, and how to, how to really parse, especially in the wake of the rising crisis that you're seeing, even if it's just starting to come to the
surface, it's sort of even delayed that, you know, now we're kind of through it and
quote, back to school and back to this, that there's still this delay, and there's still
this hangover, so to speak, of the
emotional experience.
And I'm convinced everybody's nervous system is in fireflight.
Still.
I'm with you on the nervous system stuff.
I mean, that really rocked our world.
And when we think about, you know, really hugely unsettling events, they do sort of rewire
our nervous system.
And I think that we're having to find our way through that.
Two things. We are seeing aftermath.
And we can be very specific about that.
I really worry about eating disorders.
I really worry about kids who are abusing substances.
We don't know yet what the snapshot of mental health
is right this minute for teenagers.
And part of what's confusing is that in February of this year, right this minute for teenagers. And part of what's
confusing is that in February of this year, the CDC released a report that was
very devastating about adolescent mental health. But what's important about
those numbers is that they were collected in the fall of 2021, asking about
mood over the previous year. Oh, yeah, that kind of got lost in a lot of the
reporting. And I think that's actually a really critically important point because when I think about
the fall of 2021, what we were looking at were kids who were either entering their third
school year that was disrupted, they were all entering their third school year, either
they were going back in masks and terrified or not going back in masks and terrified
or, you know, still hybrid and unhappy.
So it was a very particular time.
So just to say, like, we kind of don't know
and we won't know for about another 18 months
where we stand now.
Anacdotally, and this is important to say,
for kids who are back to their regular routines,
they looked to me like kids did before 2020.
That awesome.
I'm seeing a lot of just typical adolescence, right?
Which is also rich in spicy on a good day, but it's typical.
Right?
Yes.
But the things I worry about, I worry about increased isolation.
People spend more time away from one another.
I worry about eating disorders in kids of all genders.
We have traditionally attached these two girls. That's not actually how it works.
And I worry about, you know, we haven't talked about social media. It's a big topic.
And I feel very, I feel like it's way more complicated than just, you know, all good or all bad.
I worry about the norms and digital environments where kids hang out. And what I mean by that
digital environments where kids hang out. And what I mean by that is that one thing I feel
that we definitely saw between March of 2020
and then the subsequent years was a kids who were stuck
at home who felt like they were gonna use that time
to get in shape, right, and improve themselves.
So they start searching online for fitness diet,
exercise, anything like that.
The algorithms that drive social media pick this up and start to flood their feed with
image after image after image of ultra thin or ultra fit.
And then how to lose weight in here's an advertisement for it.
Teenagers are vulnerable to norms.
They are more vulnerable to norms than kids are.
They are more vulnerable to norms than kids are. They are more vulnerable to norms than adults are. And I it's hard because we can't prove this
with the data, but I will just go out on a limb and say, I am convinced if you are looking
at 4,000 images a day of ultra-fid, ultra-thin people, that impacts real world behavior. And
that changes how you eat and that changes how you exercise. And we did see an explosion of eating disorders.
So what I would say is we got to watch where kids are online now and forever because the
norms are powerful.
I can't agree more. In fact, it happened to our daughter.
And I remember when she got into treatment for disordered eating, she ended up deleting
her visco and her Instagram.
And she said, like, my entire feed is basically models and waste trainers and puppies.
And it makes me feel terrible.
And I keep looking at these images
and it makes me feel like I'm,
I like need to get like that.
And I know, I know that these are fake.
I know there are filters, but I still can't help it.
I want to be like that.
And so it drove all of this obsessive behavior.
Is there also a connection
with the spike in eating disorders because it is typically something driven by this need
to control? It's interesting. I wrote a piece for the times, I think it came out in April
2021 about the spike in eating disorders. And there's a variety of reasons that can come into it.
So some is, everything feels out of control.
Here's one thing I can't control.
That can be really powerful.
Another that one of the experts I interviewed referenced
that I thought was really important,
is that we had a lot of very hard driving teenagers
with a whole lot of energy who suddenly couldn't do
the things they usually did.
Who would have poured their growth, self-improvement,
juice into band and sports and all these other things?
And who had just a whole bunch of that lying around, and so then they turned it against themselves into,
I'm just going to get really fit because I might as well do something to make myself better, you know, finger quote, better in this time.
But I do also just think if all you're looking at are ultra thin, ultra fit bodies and you
are not going to school and looking at normal bodies in 3D, your sense of what bodies
looks like changes and your view of your own body changes.
I want to ask you a very specific question on this topic, because I think there's also
this kind of cultural obsession with being in shape and being healthy and being good looking.
And if you've got a kid that suddenly goes on a health kick and now they're exercising
and they get positive reinforcement because they're looking great and they're not going to run the 5K
and now they're going to get in triathlons or now you know everyone's like,
oh you look great in that bathing suit.
Where is the line where it's a healthy thing
Verses this is now something that's scary because I miss the signs Yeah, and kids are also remarkable at just kind of oh, it's fine
Yeah, I'm just ah, and then because it's in this lane of but they look better, but they say they're going for a run
How do I insert myself here? How do you do that? And that's lane of, but they look better, but they say they're going for a run.
How do I insert myself here?
How do you do that?
It's tricky, and it is easy to miss.
So some framing stuff.
One is, teenagers shouldn't be losing weight.
And usually they're gaining weight in the course of typical development and post-later puberty,
you know, that they're gaining weight and they're gaining strength. So if you notice that your
teenager has lost weight, you should be attentive to that. It's just an unusual thing for teenagers to
do. And it's not all bad. I mean, you can talk with your pediatrician, and you know, there are some teenagers who
the pediatrician may say, you know, this weight is not an healthy place, you know, losing
some weight would be healthier thing to do.
Then you can do that with a nutritionist and the pediatrician and do it in a controlled
and careful way.
But one thing I've learned from my colleagues in the eating disorder world is by the time
a teenager is losing weight, something's usually up.
And I think that's just a valuable, you know, marker to have.
The other thing that we want to watch out for is dropping entire food categories.
So I'll put it this way.
Not everybody who becomes a vegetarian goes on to developing eating disorder.
Everybody who goes on to developing an eating disorder. Everybody who goes on to developing an eating disorder
drops a food category.
Oh my God, our daughter, the one who did have
disordered eating, did a research paper in college
about, I don't even remember the name of it,
but that there's a lot of people in her age group
that are gluten free or vegan or dairy free or this and it is a socially acceptable
and praised way to have disordered eating. It's not actually an allergy. It's literally
a, it's crossed a line. Is that what you're talking about?
It, it's a flag. It's a flag. And one of the ways I sometimes assess that flag is, I'll sometimes care for teenagers
who are like, I don't eat sugar.
And I'll be like, mm, right.
And my eyebrows will go up.
But if I also know that they don't eat sugar unless somebody brings in some really good
cupcakes, I don't worry about it too much.
Okay.
So there's like what people say and what people do and what we want
fundamentally is to see that food is a pleasure, but it is a wonderful source of energy that
there's variety in a young person's diet and any of our diets. So those are some flags to keep
an eye out for. And then I would say if concerns really start to rise, we can actually go back to where we started
around people having two sides.
And it's the job of all of us, and teenagers are developing in their capacity to take
good care of ourselves.
That's our job.
And so if a teenager is suddenly eating nothing but celery and running, you know, a lot,
that kid is not taking good care of themselves. And so before
it gets to that extreme, I would want the loving person in their life to say, Hey, you
know, I see that you're getting pretty fit, but I'm not so sure you're taking good care
of yourself. Are you taking good care of yourself? Are you eating the kind of variety of
nutrition? Are you being gentle enough on your body like exercise? Yeah, but not to the point of injury, you know, to use that as a guardrail that
Fundamentally, that's the goal is for the teenager to be doing a really really excellent job of caring for themselves
beautiful. I worry a lot about how
We seem to have a parenting
crisis of parents who can't tolerate their kids' anxiety
and are allowing their kids' anxiety to run the house.
Can you give us some advice, especially given that teenagers are such emotional beings
to begin with. How do you give space for the
normal emotion without letting a teenager's emotion run your house or dictate what they do?
Well, thank you for bringing up this. I mean, it's a huge topic. And actually, between untangled
and the emotional lives of teenagers, I published a book called Under Pressure,
confronting the epidemic of stress and anxiety in girls.
But what I hear all the time is 80% applies to kids of all genders, which I am sure is true.
And in that book, I actually make, at the outset, a case for healthy anxiety and a case for healthy stress.
And we have always a psychologist recognized that healthy anxiety is the anxiety
that alerts us when something's wrong.
It is not on its own pathological.
And we have not helped the situation
by using the same word to describe healthy anxiety
and something that we diagnose.
It's sort of better said.
We have the word sadness
and we have depression for the diagnosis,
but we use anxiety in both categories,
so that doesn't help as much.
And same with stress, stress is actually the human experience of adaptation.
We experience stress anytime things change, anytime we have to adapt to a new condition,
and it can be a wonderful condition or allows you condition, but we always experience stress
under change conditions.
And we only consider stress pathological if it is chronic or traumatic, but all other
stress we just talk into the, you know, helping you grow doesn't always feel good category.
What I will tell you is that the most important thing for people to know about anxiety is
that avoidance feeds anxiety.
And this is one of the, again,
most critical findings in psychology
and one that we have done a completely terrible job
of getting out to the public.
And here's how it works.
If I, let's say, have some social avoidance,
some social anxiety,
and there's a party that I've been invited to
and it's a good party to go to, right?
It's a rational, it should be fun,
a friend of mine's party.
But say I feel anxious,
and say I agree to go to the party,
but then the day of my anxiety is starting
to really accelerate, and then I'm thinking,
I don't think I should go, I don't wanna go,
and say my parent is like,
ah, it's just a party, you don't have to go, right?
Here's what happens.
The first thing that happens is I feel so much better, right?
My anxiety was cresting, and then I get to avoid and it immediately plummets. It's like what we call
reinforcement instantly relief. And so the upshot of that is the next time I feel anxious,
I know what helps me feel better, it's avoidance. So that's the first problem. The second problem
is that I never go to the party and check out how it is right? So whatever I have daydreamed about how terrifying this party is or how to you know like
Everyone will be at the party that is now sealed in amber and I continue to believe it because I have no counter
evidence
Whereas if I go to the party I'm like, oh wait, it's not so bad, but if I don't go
So it actually entrenched anxiety
to avoid the things we fear.
Now, if a kid is avoiding school,
which a lot of kids are right now,
there's a third issue, which is the minute
you don't show up at school,
you are out of the loop socially
and you are out of the loop academically.
So it's that much harder to get back in.
So there's not a lot in psychology
where there is agreement across the entire
field where there is zero controversy. But on this one, everyone's an agreement that
avoids anxiety and everyone is an agreement that exposure is the answer. And what I mean
by that is you have to get in. You know, you don't have to go to every party all the time,
but you have to baby step your way in. You have to go check out the party. You cannot have the reinforcement of avoidance. You cannot have
the daydream become the reality. And so if this is your kid and they're like, I can't go to school,
I can't go to the party. I can't, you know, fill in the blank. You say, all right, here's a deal.
You're going to go to the party for 20 minutes and then I'm going to forget something and text you
and see if, you know, you need me to pick you up. And if you need me to pick you up for 20 minutes and then I'm going to forget something and text you and see if you need me to pick you up.
And if you need me to pick you up after 20 minutes, I'll get you.
But if you can stay, that would be better.
So you have to negotiate.
You have to help them get in.
Breathing is powerful for helping to control anxiety, reframing is powerful for helping
to control anxiety.
But avoidance is anxiety's best friend.
It's devastating because you're right. I think about the fact that I was homesick at every camp so much so that I would
just escalate it until the counselors got so tired that my parents had show up
because it works.
It goes back to your original thing.
We do these things because they work.
They work.
And when we allow our kid to keep transferring from one school to another
because they can't handle it,
we are locking in anxiety as a coping mechanism,
and avoidance as a coping mechanism.
Wow, you are so good.
I want to ask you one final question,
which is, if you had to bottom line it to make it really simple,
because clearly it's very complicated
to have teenagers in your life.
They're amazing and they're also incredibly challenging emotional beings going through
a lot of change.
If you had to bottom line the way you want us to think about your role in a teenager's life. What are we there to provide for them
as parents, uncles, aunts, mentors, teachers, doctors? How do we show up in this cauldron
of emotion and uncertainty? I can say it in two words, but Mel, this is to be
filed under easy to say very hard to do. Our job is to try to be a steady presence.
What does that mean? That means that when teenagers are having their big feelings and their feelings
are big and they come our way with their big feelings and their feelings are big and
They come our way with their big feelings
That we don't meet them where they are. We don't get as agitated as they are
Oh, that we can listen
be attentive and offer empathy
which a huge percentage of the time is all they want. And there's two reasons why this is critically important.
One is that when teenagers are bringing us their concerns,
they're watching our reaction.
And if they're having a really bad 15-year-old day,
and then they bring it to us, and then we hit the ceiling,
they can't help but think, oh my gosh,
I thought this
was like 15 year old size bad. It turns out it's 52 year old size bad, right? So bad is
not reassuring to them. And then the other thing is when we offer empathy as the response,
so we're there, we're there and we're empathic with whatever their distress is, I think
that is actually the all time steady presence move. Because what you're doing is you're highly present.
You are empathizing, you are saying that stinks, I am sorry.
I wish that had not happened.
So you are there for it.
But you're incredibly steady.
You are not picking up the phone.
You are not canceling plans.
You are not becoming highly agitated.
And so deep empathy and just listening goes so much further than we sometimes give a credit for.
And even if there's more to be done, starting with empathy is never a bad move.
And a huge percentage of the time gives teenagers everything that they want and need.
Wow.
I love your phrase, it stinks.
Because you're right.
If there are big emotions, that's all you need to say.
That's stinks.
Yeah.
I never really thought about it from the standpoint that
if I get distressed, I magnify their distress.
I think I'm going to use the power of objectivity
and use you as my avatar.
And the next time Kendall facetimes me, to use the power of objectivity and use you as my avatar.
And the next time Kendall facetimes me,
because she graduates from college a week from Thursday.
And so I'm just sort of like waiting for the roller coaster.
And I am going to embody you.
I'm going to just be a steady presence.
And I'm going to realize that the emotions
that she's going to feel
from the grief to the excitement to the fear to the sadness, I just have to hold space for it.
I don't need to project, oh no, what if a trigger's eating disorder, what if this happens,
what if I had to, hey, that, a criteria up, calm down, it's going to be okay. Like I don't have to do any of that. I just have to say it's thanks.
Wow, because that's normal and it's actually a sign that she's mentally well. Oh my gosh.
The evidence of her perfect functioning and and the same is truthy adults in your life.
That if the big feelings and the distress
Is related to a corresponding event that makes sense.
They're mentally well.
That is a revelation.
A revelation.
Everybody, you have got to pick up this book, The Emotional Lives of Teenagers.
I cannot tell you how helpful, hopeful, encouraging, empowering it is.
I find your work so helpful because it is always
grounded in a larger framing.
And so the advice that sounds simple is suddenly so profound because you understand it in the
context of the larger framing.
Thank you.
I'm so glad I can be helpful.
Oh my gosh.
It's a hard time to be a person and it's a hard time to be
well as in teenagers. And here's what I want people to know. We have studied
adolescent mental health for decades. And the single most powerful force for
protecting teenage mental health is strong relationships with caring adults.
We're not going to Medicaid or therapies our way out of this adolescent mental health crisis.
It's going to be about the adults around teenagers.
Parents, caregivers, bosses,
mentors, coaches, teachers,
being there for teenagers,
and being invested in their emotional lives,
that's how we're going to find our way through this.
Well, thank you for giving us the tools to be able to show up and do just that.
It's an honor to be here.
Well, it's incredible talk to you.
You're so cool.
Oh, I got so much out of that conversation.
Holy smokes.
I wish you lived closer to me.
Don't you wish you lived closer to you?
I would love to have her on speed dial or as my walk and buddy.
But now we've got her on the Mel Robbins podcast.
And you've got me and I've got you and I'm so happy
We're doing this thing called life together. In case nobody else tells you today
I wanted to be sure to remind you that I love you
I believe in you and I believe in your ability to feel all those big emotions
to ride the wave and to be a
study presence
for the people in your life and for yourself.
Because as we just learned, that's exactly what everybody needs from us.
Alrighty, I'll talk to you in a few days. I love you.
Oh, one more thing. It's the legal language.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach,
psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
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