The Rich Roll Podcast - Lisa Damour, PhD On The Emotional Lives of Teenagers
Episode Date: April 10, 2023Adolescence has always been a difficult phase of life, but today’s teenagers are navigating a world that is vastly different from any generation before them. From social media to cyberbullying, from... political polarization to climate change, the challenges facing teenagers today are numerous and complex. So how do we equip teens emotionally with the tools they need to navigate our complex and ever-changing world? Here to help us answer this question is teen whisperer par excellence, Lisa Damour, PhD. Lisa is a Yale-educated psychotherapist with a doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the University of Michigan who specializes in education and child development. She is the author of three New York Times bestsellers: Untangled, Under Pressure, and The Emotional Lives of Teenagers—the latter being the subject of today’s exchange. We explore the impact of social media on mental health, the pressure to succeed academically and professionally, and the struggles that come with trying to fit in and find a sense of belonging. We also look at the ways in which the pandemic has exacerbated some of these challenges, and how teenagers are coping with the disruption to their lives. Lisa provides concrete, actionable strategies for teaching teens how to manage their feelings and overcome friction at home. If you are a parent of young humans trying to make the right moves, or just want to better understand how young people think and why they behave as they do, then this episode is appointment listening. Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: Momentous: LiveMomentous.com/richroll Birch Living: birchiving.com/richroll Indeed: Indeed.com/RICHROLL Plant Power Meal Planner: https://meals.richroll.com Peace + Plants, Rich
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The Rich Roll Podcast.
The single most powerful force for adolescent mental health
is strong relationships with caring adults.
Adolescence has always been a difficult phase of life,
but today's teenagers are navigating a world that is vastly different from that of their parents.
Teens are experiencing a mental health crisis, according to a new CDC survey.
42% of high school students reported feeling persistent sadness or hopelessness.
31% of girls and young women have symptoms of anxiety.
In the decade before the pandemic, we were seeing rising rates of anxiety and depression.
And then, of course, the pandemic did not help.
So how do we equip teens emotionally with the tools they need to navigate our complex and ever-changing world?
Well, here to help us answer this question is...
Psychologist and CBS News contributor...
Lisa DeMoor.
Lisa is a Yale-educated psychotherapist with a doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Michigan who specializes in education and child development.
She is the author of three New York Times bestsellers, Untangled, Under Pressure, and The Emotional Lives of Teenagers, the latter being the subject of today's exchange.
of teenagers, the latter being the subject of today's exchange.
Curiosity plus empathy or just empathy is, I would say, overwhelmingly the most effective and also wanted response when teenagers come our way with their distress.
Today, we explore the issues that are most pressing for today's teens.
We talk about the impact of social media and mental health, the pressure to succeed academically and professionally, and the struggles that come with trying to fit in and find a sense of belonging.
We also look at the ways in which the pandemic has exacerbated some of these challenges and how teenagers are coping with the disruption to their lives.
But most importantly, Lisa provides concrete, actionable strategies for supporting teens who feel at the mercy of their emotions so they can become more psychologically aware
and more skilled at managing their feelings and how to approach friction at home.
Lisa also provides the groundwork for initiating important conversations around risky behavior,
navigating friendships and romance, the dangers of social media,
and many other topics. And today, she's going to tell us all about it. But first.
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again, go to recovery.com.
We're brought to you today by recovery.com.
I've been in recovery for a long time.
It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe
everything good in my life to sobriety.
And it all began with treatment and experience that I had that quite literally
saved my life. And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their
loved ones find treatment. And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming
and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of care, especially
because unfortunately, not all treatment
resources adhere to ethical practices. It's a real problem. A problem I'm now happy and proud
to share has been solved by the people at recovery.com, who created an online support portal
designed to guide, to support, and empower you to find the ideal level of care tailored to your personal needs.
They've partnered with the best global behavioral health providers
to cover the full spectrum of behavioral health disorders,
including substance use disorders, depression, anxiety, eating disorders, gambling addictions, and more.
Navigating their site is simple.
Search by insurance coverage, location, treatment type,
you name it. Plus, you can read reviews from former patients to help you decide.
Whether you're a busy exec, a parent of a struggling teen, or battling addiction yourself,
I feel you. I empathize with you. I really do. And they have treatment options for you.
really do, and they have treatment options for you. Life in recovery is wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey. When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com
and take the first step towards recovery. To find the best treatment option for you
or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com.
or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com.
So if you're a parent of young humans trying to make the right moves,
or maybe you just wanna better understand
how young people think and why they behave as they do,
then this episode is appointment listening.
But with that, please enjoy me and Lisa DeMoore.
Well, Lisa, it's an absolute delight
to have you back on the podcast.
The first time you were on was in April of 2019.
So a lot has happened in everybody's lives,
especially in the lives of our precious teenagers.
And so you are here today to expound upon
how we can better understand our teens
and guide them, parent them
through what has been a very difficult period.
And what is a very challenging period for teens
throughout the history of human beings, right?
But there does seem to have been something rather acute
and different about the last couple of years
that we weathered.
And your book has been an amazing resource to me
as somebody who's parenting an older teen
and a younger teen at the moment.
And it's that thing where just when you think
you've got it figured out, something happens
and you feel completely at a loss
to how to sort of manage the situation.
And so the book has been a real touchdown for me
and a great service to many people, I'm sure.
So thank you for writing it.
Thank you for saying that.
And in getting kind of ready to talk to you today,
I came across the New York Times review of your book,
the first sentence of which I just have to read out loud.
The very first sentence of the review goes like this.
You know what's enjoyable about living with teenagers?
Nothing, truly not one thing.
They might distract you by appearing
to be deeply interesting and funny, but don't be fooled.
Teenagers are diabolical.
You might have a different lens on that,
but I think that that's a very kind of common parental
of reaction that kind of spawns from confusion,
perhaps that like what is going on with these creatures
who at one moment not too long ago were quite sweet
and now suddenly seem to be people
we don't recognize anymore.
Yeah, yeah, no, it has never been easy to be a teenager
or to raise a teenager.
And one of the kind of broad ways we can walk up to it
is to recognize that one of our cardinal rules in psychology
is that change equals stress.
And I think about if you put a 12 year old
next to an 18 year old, right?
You're not even looking at the same species anymore.
And that is so much change
in an unbelievably short span of time.
There's no way it's not gonna be stressful
for the kid who's going through it
and for everyone around them.
And with that, I mean,
we can kind of intellectualize that and understand that, but in the heat of the moment
when things tend to get a little chaotic,
we default to patterns or behaviors that are,
by and large, not helpful.
Well-intentioned, but not helpful.
So how do we even sort of know, sort of embark upon,
you know, understanding this?
I mean, I would say just at the outset,
as somebody who, you know, my teen years were fraught,
a lot of people's teen years were fraught.
And, you know, as a parent, as I mentioned,
I've got, you know, two teens now,
and I've got two older step-sons who are 26 and 27.
So I've been doing this for a while.
And, you know, at times I feel like I've learned a lot
and I really understand this.
And then other times I'm completely out of my depth.
But one thing that I have developed
is a huge compassion for teenagers.
It's just, it's so hard.
And of course the last few years
have been uniquely extreme.
And every time I feel like I have a grip on it,
something happens and the degree of difficulty escalates.
And I just don't know what to do.
And I find myself misstepping constantly
and then trying to figure out how to repair
whatever misstep that I made.
So I think it's disorienting for most parents.
So how do we begin to kind of understand
like just in the most general sense,
what is happening with the onset of adolescence
as our younger people enter those teen years?
I mean, one of the things that was striking about your book
is the neurology of it all
and how it actually begins quite earlier
than we might suspect.
Yeah, so when psychologists say teenager
and the onset of adolescence,
we have always marked that at age 11,
which is much, much earlier than people tend to think.
People think 13, you got till 13, teenager, and we got time.
And truly, paper's going back a hundred years.
We've marked the onset of adolescence at 11.
And the reason for that is puberty is underway.
And sometimes it's visible outwardly.
And even if it's not visible outwardly, it's certainly underway internally.
And that does change the brain.
That changes how it operates.
That changes the balance of power in the brain.
Power is increasingly distributed to the emotional centers.
Power is increasingly distributed to the emotional centers.
And the experience in the home is that the kid who literally yesterday
would let you call them cutie patootie,
wanted to go to the store with you,
thought your jokes were funny.
I think for a lot of parents, it feels like overnight,
the door closes literally to their room.
They bristle at childhood nicknames.
They don't think our jokes are funny.
And it's very, very hard not to feel both shocked by it
because it happened so much sooner than is expected.
And also very hard for it to not feel personal.
And I would say that if I had to describe my work,
it really is in the space between parent and teenager.
And a huge amount of what my work aims to do
is to give the adults who care for teenagers
a perspective on adolescent development
that makes it clear that adolescence
is not something they do to us.
It's a really, really challenging phase
that they are working their way through.
And we're often pulled in in ways that don't always
make sense or that we don't feel comfortable with.
Right, I think we understand that individuation
is a healthy thing and this is a necessary aspect
of growing up and healthy in the best way.
And yet it still does feel personal,
even when you know that it isn't.
And so the challenge, like the Jedi approach
is to depersonalize everything and not allow any of this
to kind of impact your emotional,
kind of state of being so that you're not reactive
in these situations and to have that gap,
that moment where you can be like,
Oh, okay, I can identify what this is.
It actually doesn't have anything to do with me.
Yeah, if you can do that 20% of the time,
you're killing it, I think.
I think that so often it goes so fast and is so powerful.
There's a section in my book called
Why Your Teen Hates How You Chew.
And it's about separation and individuation.
And I remember having learned about these things in school.
This was part of my training.
And then having my older daughter turn 13
and start to move into that phase
where no matter what I did,
it absolutely rubbed her the wrong way.
And I remember thinking, oh my gosh,
like the term does not do justice to how
hard this is, how hard it is that when I do things that are like how she sees herself becoming,
it's annoying to her. When I do things that are unlike how she sees herself becoming,
it's annoying to her. Everything is annoying to her. And I think that part of what helps us
to sustain people through those moments with your kid that are just,
they're painful, right?
Like you're just in it is to really, I hope have some,
if you feel heard in that, to feel like, okay,
someone gets it that this is a really hard thing
with my kid or even, you know,
that common thing that happens where a kid comes home
from school and you're like, how was school?
And it's like nothing but complaining.
Like that is so much often what happens. I think there's real value in
kids being able to come home and dump all the garbage of the day. But I also think that my
work is to say to parents, this is not the most fun part of the day. Like this is often like not
the conversation we want to have, or at best, sometimes just really tedious. But being present
for it is really valuable to our kids.
Not trying to give them advice if they don't want it
is valuable for our kids.
I think that when parents know they're not in it alone,
that this thing that feels so specific and personal
that's happening in their home
is actually happening everywhere.
I think that's where I can try to communicate
that information to parents in the hope that then
when it's happening, it does feel a little less personal or more diffused.
Right, a mantra that I've sort of used
to help me through those moments
is understanding that it's my job to love my kids,
but it's not my kid's job to love me, you know,
and not looking to my kids to have any of my needs met.
And I think that's a common misstep.
I mean, I was parented by somebody
who in a not so healthy way,
like parented me and my sister in a way that,
what was paramount was making sure that her needs were met.
And so that's part of my like framework and DNA.
Like those are the buttons that are installed.
And if I'm not careful, I will default to, you know,
that type of behavior that I so loathed, right?
Like everything I've done to try to overcome those patterns
and not parent in that way in a weak moment,
I will do just that very thing.
So you're self-aware,
which is as good as we, is as much as we can hope for.
It's not always enough though.
That's the self-awareness is good, but-
It's a good first step.
It's gotta translate into some kind of action.
Yeah, but I really believe very strongly,
like there's no perfect parent
and you don't need to be a perfect parent, right?
I think that if parents can be observant
of their own histories,
observant of how it plays out in their homes,
like that puts you way ahead of a lot of parents.
I also think that it's really, really important what you said about not looking to kids,
much less teenagers for gratification.
And I think what's hard is often with kids,
it is enormously gratifying.
It's so fun to parent kids,
especially between ages six to 10.
It really, it's wonderful and delightful.
But I feel like if you are approaching,
if your kid is approaching adolescence
and you don't have in place a way to feel good
about yourself or proud of your efforts,
you need that before your kid hits adolescence
because you're not gonna get it from your kid.
And I feel for people who in taking care of their kids
have given up things that they themselves
really draw value from,
because I think when their kid does become a teenager
and stops finding anything that the parent does,
particularly pleasant, they can feel pretty empty handed.
Yeah, they feel this is a breach of the contract.
Exactly, I put in all this time.
There was a quid pro quo here,
didn't you know that we made a deal?
Yeah.
It's like, no, I didn't make that deal.
Yeah. Yeah.
So your work historically has focused primarily on girls.
This is different, this new book,
because it casts its gaze on all teenagers.
So, you know, the obvious question is like,
why this book and why now?
So the why now and the why of this book
actually had the same answer,
which was two factors that came along.
One was the pandemic.
And that was a time where, you know, the needs of all teenagers came to the fore.
And I have cared for boys and kids of all genders over the course of my career, more girls than boys or kids of other genders.
But it was so hard on the teenagers
to go through the pandemic.
And it was hard on everybody,
but for teenagers in particular, they have two jobs.
You know, one is to become increasingly independent
and the other is to spend as much time as possible
with their friends.
And the pandemic undermined their ability to do either.
And so I'd never seen,
I mean, I've been practicing for almost 30 years.
I'd never seen suffering on the scale I've been practicing for almost 30 years. I'd never seen suffering on the scale
that the pandemic brought about in teenagers everywhere.
The other force that inspired me to write the book
was that the cultural discourse
around what mental health is
stopped squaring with how we understand it as psychologists
and moved to a place where a lot of the time,
it seems as though being mentally healthy
is equated with feeling good or calm or relaxed or happy.
I am all for people having those feelings.
I would like for people to have those feelings often.
That does not inform
how we think about mental health and psychology. It's not a good
definition of mental health. And in fact, I think it actually sets up a very fragile position for
parents and kids, if that becomes the definition, because parent may be happy, calm, relaxed,
the kid may be feeling that, anything can come along and mess that up.
And I would never want people to think
that then their mental health is suddenly up for grabs.
They may be having a very bad day,
but it felt to me imperative to do work
that helped people make the distinction
between distress and a mental health concern,
because too often right now,
those are spoken about in the same breath.
Right, so two very important things, COVID,
and then how we're conceptualizing mental health.
I wanna get to COVID, but let's park that for now
and just kind of riff on the mental health conversation,
because I think that's a big one.
I couldn't agree more.
I think that there, it's a situation in which, you know,
good intentions have gone awry.
Like there is a mental health conversation
going on right now that is helpful.
People are thinking about it in ways that didn't exist
prior to the pandemic, but it's a situation
where there are unforeseen negative consequences
as a result.
Everything is a trauma. we're all victims,
we're coddling, you know, in the Jonathan Haidt
kind of thesis of over coddling people as parents,
we're so fearful of exposing our children
to any form of risk or peril.
And so we're hovering and overly accommodating.
And then these teens are then running the household.
It's like, there's all sorts of crazy stuff that's going on
that is born out of this good idea
of like how do we protect our kids?
How do we prioritize their mental health?
So distress on the one hand,
which you characterize as maybe difficult emotions,
but appropriate given a certain context
that are responded to by the parent
from a perspective of trying to make them go away
and get you back to a place of happiness.
You know, let's fix it, let's fix it.
There's something, if you're not happy,
there's something wrong with you.
Like, what does that do to a young mind
who's constantly being impulsed with this message
that if you're not happy all the time,
if you're not like experiencing passion and bliss
and all of this, that there's some kind of pathology
lingering inside of you.
I think what it does is it makes distress
seem like the bad guy.
When the way we view it in psychology
is that distress is integral to human functioning.
And for teenagers, and of course this is within limits,
but for teenagers, distress is part of how
actually all of us navigate the world.
We know what feels good and what doesn't.
And so we do more of the things that feel good, hopefully,
and less of the things that, you know,
are having negative consequences.
And for teenagers, it is also growth giving.
It's actually profoundly growth giving.
When I think about the kids I've worked with clinically
who have gone through something really painful,
and I mean, gone through it,
like been allowed to have the experience
and find their way through,
I've never seen maturation happen at so rapid a pace.
And what I mean, you know,
there may be a kid who, you know,
is confronted by a tragedy,
something really awful happens and it's extremely painful.
And we would wish that it never happened,
but if they're helped through it,
you end up with teenagers who are philosophical
and broad-minded in ways that you don't see
usually at that age.
Or if a teenager messes up,
does something really dumb, right?
Like cheats and gets caught
and has to sit with the consequences at school
and sit with the consequences at home.
Those are the kids who in my practice
are saying things to me like,
I never wanna feel this way again.
Like I'm gonna organize myself
around not having to feel this,
or this has made me think so much
about the kind of person I wanna be.
And so I find myself as a psychologist right now,
in some ways trying to do PR for distress, right?
Like it has a hugely important place
really in all of our lives.
And then especially for teenagers, feeling it helps them grow, helps them navigate.
And then knowing that they can find their way through, developing skill sets for managing it is actually what allows them to function autonomously.
It allows them to move away from us, go to places where they don't necessarily know that it's going to go well.
Because if they consider it, they think, well, if I go there and it doesn't go well,
I can handle that. Like I have it within myself to manage. Whereas, you know, to answer your
question, kids who feel that they can only proceed in circumstances where they know they won't be uncomfortable
or they could be guaranteed that it's gonna go well,
end up on these extraordinarily narrow paths, right?
Because very little of life has that.
Sure.
So for me, I really think being able to accept distress
and work one's way through it,
for teenagers in particular, it's the keys to the kingdom.
It is what lets them move freely into the world.
Right, it's similar to Susan David's, you know,
notions around emotional resilience, right?
Like you can't develop that type of resilience
unless you allow, you put yourself in a position to fail
and kind of grapple with failure
and learning how to move forward and all of those things,
especially at that time when your brain is wiring,
it's such a rapid rate, right?
Like there seems to be a preciousness
to this period of time where this kind of thing
is more kind of mission critical than it is later in life.
It's hard.
It's both mission critical.
And then also parents get really scared
about how teenagers could derail themselves
perhaps permanently.
And so it takes a pretty high tolerance.
Right.
You have this phrase,
angst is the price of admission.
Yeah.
Is that you came up with?
Did you come up with that?
I don't know that I did.
Yeah, I don't know where I read that,
but I made a note of it here, which I think is great.
But yeah, from the point of view of the parent,
it then becomes, the job then becomes deciphering
what is the situation that demands
some level of intervention,
and when is it appropriate for me to be,
to take a step back and allow this to unfold
without intervening?
Yeah, no, I think it's a really tough call
and there's no perfect science to it, right?
I mean, that's the thing, like I have no answer
that can tell a parent, here's how you'll know.
And I think that one of the hardest things
about raising a teenager is you actually cannot guarantee your teenager safety. Like
there's nothing you can do to guarantee that your teenager will not find themselves in a position
that's truly dangerous. That is so scary. I can say that both as a parent and as a psychologist
who cares for kids. But I also know that fear is a terrible position from which to parent.
And that's something that also I think a lot right now
about how hard it is to parent teenagers.
We have these unrelenting headlines
about the adolescent mental health crisis,
about youth suicide.
And I feel both glad that we're having the conversation
and also concerned about what it feels like as a parent
to be seeing those headlines all the time
and how that would shape or inform reacting
to even more garden variety, adolescent upset.
Sure, yeah.
And I definitely wanna dig into that.
But in thinking about like the media,
there was one article in the Atlantic a couple of years ago
that was all about accommodative parenting.
Do you see this article?
It's like the anxious child
and the crisis of modern parenting.
And it's really about the fear that the parents have,
when they see these statistics and like, oh my God,
like all these teenage girls are having suicidal ideation
and loneliness and all this stuff.
Like we've gotta make sure that our kid is in there.
They're transferring all of that fear
and that pathology onto their child,
from a place again of best intentions,
but there's a whole downstream kind of negative reaction.
When that child is like, it makes the kid feel unsafe.
And then, oh, I guess I should be afraid
because my parents are so afraid.
And then that's actually exacerbating the situation
that you're trying to ameliorate.
That's my big worry now actually,
is that the best gift we can give our kids,
especially our teenagers,
is to try to be a steady presence.
Teenagers experience their own emotions
as very, very powerful and destabilizing.
And part of how they can feel more secure
is if they bring their emotions to the parent
and the parent can react at least outwardly in a calm way.
And I think about it's analog in raising younger kids.
You know how like if your toddler is running towards you
and then they fall and scrape their knee,
that they look at their knee
and then they look at your face, right?
And we're good.
We're really good at that moment.
Like, how am I supposed to feel?
Yeah, how bad is this?
How bad is it?
And we have a very powerful
and helpful instinct in that moment
where we usually are like, you're okay, you're okay.
Even if inside we're thinking,
oh God, that looks pretty bad.
The same is true for raising teenagers
that for them, a failed test, you know,
ruptured friendship feels disastrous.
Like that's how they experience emotions.
And they come home to us and they lay it in front of us.
And the best gift we can give them is to be very empathic
and very attentive to it, but not to react at that
at their level, much less above it.
And so I think the challenge right now in parenting
is how to have these headlines all around
and try to be a steady presence
in the face of what is often garden variety
adolescent distress.
But if this is your first teenager
or you don't do this for a living,
how would you know that?
I think it's really hard.
Yeah, it seems to break down into two categories.
You have the teen who is on the emotional roller coaster
and there's lots of chaos and kind of externalization
of emotions that get dumped on the parents.
And then you have the young person
that internalizes everything and says, I'm fine,
goes to the room and shuts the door.
So what are the differences in how you interface
with those two archetypes that are on the kind of,
I mean, it's all on a spectrum of course,
but it would seem to me that there would be a differential
in like how to think about and approach
those two types of young people.
So when I think about teenagers,
I often think about them as talkers or not talkers, right?
And parents in audiences,
you can almost tell by the looks on their faces,
who's got which type of teenager.
So there are kids who come home and share a huge amount
and their kids who come home and are very, very quiet.
And that is hard on parents.
And it's especially hard on parents
when they can tell the kid is in pain.
And so what I tried to introduce in this book
was how we as psychologists think about emotion regulation,
which is that we think about it as a two-sided thing.
There's expressing emotions to get relief from them.
And there's actually reining them back in, controlling emotions, which we put actually on equal footing in terms of their
value to overall emotion regulation, which may come as a surprise to some people because we've
really moved as a culture very much to the side of like, if there's a feeling, the best thing to do
is to talk about it, maybe to excavate it, to talk it to death.
Sometimes maybe, but we actually see there's a huge wide range of other options
that would really be useful.
But what I can say fundamentally
back to your sort of these extreme examples
is our ideal is that you see a little bit of both,
both the capacity to gain relief by expressing emotions
and the capacity to tame emotions when needed.
And this is true both in the home
around garden variety, adolescent distress.
It's also how we think clinically.
If a teenager is all expression,
if their emotions are running the show,
calling all the shots,
we actually think how do we get these more tamed?
How do we get these under control?
And if a teenager is entirely reserved,
shut down, bottled up, we think clinically,
okay, what's it gonna take for this young person
to find a way to express?
So most of the time, kids are actually doing
a little bit of both back and forth.
It's not comfortable for them all the time.
It's not comfortable for their family all the time,
but as far as psychologists are concerned,
they're doing great.
What we watch out for are the extremes.
Yeah, so in the book,
you kind of, you break this down into two different pieces.
You have the management of emotions,
and then you have the regaining of, you know,
kind of control of their kind of emotional
regulatory system or their equanimity.
And then there's a whole kind of discourse around the,
you know, in the management of their emotions,
how to discern when this is healthy versus problematic.
And just because a teen comes home and like dumps some crazy
story on you
and tells you you're horrible and slams the door,
they're externalizing whatever is going on
with them emotionally.
That might be a healthy response to whatever's happening
to not be reactive to that.
Your job is to kind of, you know,
just be placid in the face of that chaos
as a stable force for that person and resist the temptation to solve the problem for the child.
I think that's right.
But what I would say is it's important
that we have parameters around how emotions get expressed.
So the kid may come home and be really angry
and have had a terrible day.
And I would never say they shouldn't be given a lot of room
to express their frustration and their annoyance with how the day went down. What we're really
going to train our attention on as psychologists is whether they express those emotions or tame
those emotions in ways that bring relief and do no harm, or whether there's a cost to how they're
going about it. So actually, if a kid comes home and just like salts the earth at there's a cost to how they're going about it. So actually if a kid comes home
and just like salts the earth at home
as a way to deal with the expression of their frustration,
that's costly, right?
They're tearing at their relationships at home.
That's not something I would wanna allow, right?
But that doesn't mean I'd want the parent to, you know,
engage with them full blast.
But I think there may be room once, you know,
things have settled a little bit and cooled off
to come back to that teenager and say,
look, you have every right to be angry
about what happened at school.
Like, I agree.
Like, that's a pretty lousy thing.
You can't express it in a way that damages relationships
or hurts other people or you.
You can't express it that way.
So here's how you can express it.
You can say this, this, and this, and this.
If you wanna go out and like kick a soccer ball,
if you wanna like go scream into a pillow,
like you can do all these things that have no cost,
but you can't come home and lay waste to family life
because you had a very bad day.
Just like torch the house.
And then the half-life of these things
is always pretty short. Then it's sort of like,
what are you talking about?
Like everything's fine.
Yeah.
I will tell you,
I think the all time art of raising a teenager
is not holding a grudge.
Yeah.
I think that is really,
they, time is different for them.
I've always felt that teenage years are like dog years.
You know, like a year for us is like seven for them.
I think an hour for us is like seven for them.
So we can still be really sore
about something that happened.
And like truly they are so far past it.
They don't even think about what happened.
Right, like you're still thinking about that?
Like they're 10 steps down the road, you know?
So I think that if we're gonna enjoy our teenagers,
which we should, I think a lot of it is saying our piece
around behavior when we need to,
but then meeting them where they are.
And if they're in a better place, like let it go, get there.
What about the child who is internalizing everything,
who's reclusive?
That often leaves the parent in a state of distress
because they just don't know what's going on, right?
Like they may think, well, that kid doesn't seem
well attuned to his or her environment,
doesn't quite seem happy,
but we don't really know what's going on.
And that can be a real scary place for a parent.
And then, you know,
what is the typical kind of parent response to that?
Where do parents go wrong in trying to decipher that
and understand what's happening so that they can,
you know, be of maximum service?
Yeah, no, it's interesting.
Sometimes I'll be with an audience
and a parent will tell a story about their kid
who just talks and talks and talks and complains and complains and complains.
And then another parent will raise their hand and say,
I wish my kid, I wish my kid were telling me what's going on.
Because it is, as you described,
it's worrisome to parents.
So the first thing I would want to rule out, right?
You know, I'm a clinician.
So we think about like, what do you want to rule out
in terms of how worried to be?
So one is like, is the kid using substances? Like a clinician, so we think about like, what do you wanna rule out in terms of how worried to be? So one is like, is the kid using substances?
Like a lot, right?
And when we think about ways that emotions get tamed,
substances are extremely effective and extremely powerful.
And that is one of the kind of high likelihood ways
if a kid's gonna handle their emotions,
tame them in a way that's gonna be costly,
that's a very high likelihood way to do it.
So first question I'd have is, is the kid abusing, right? Is the kid using substances in a way that's gonna be costly, that's a very high likelihood way to do it. So first question I'd have is, is a kid abusing, right?
Is a kid using substances in a way that's concerning?
And then you deal with that.
The other way that kids tame emotions
that can be very problematic over time
is by sort of chronic distraction.
That they have an uncomfortable feeling
and then they are on video games for hours.
And distraction has its place in helping us maintain our emotional equilibrium.
But some kids are working so hard to not feel things that they are constantly distracting themselves.
And often technology is where this is happening.
So much so that it starts to cost them in other areas, right?
They're not making friendships.
They're not getting their schoolwork done.
So in terms of like levels of when to worry
about a kid who's very reserved
or not sharing with a parent,
I would first worry about substances,
worry about constant distraction
and tackle those as the problems they are.
Then they're the kids who just aren't big talkers, right?
They're just not big talkers or they're very private.
And there are a couple of ways that parents can think
about how to change that with their kid.
One is teenagers are organized around autonomy.
They wanna become increasingly independent.
And so it shouldn't surprise us that they may not be
in the mood to answer our questions
when we are asking them, right?
If we're at dinner, like, okay, how was school?
What happened? It happens all the time. The parents are like, the kid's like, fine, nothing, right? If we're at dinner, like, okay, how was school? What happened?
It happens all the time. The parents are like, the kids like, fine, nothing, right?
And so one thing I was so delighted to discover
in writing this book is something that was happening
in my home and that I think a lot of families think
is just happening in their home,
is that the kid who tells them nothing after school,
at dinner, asking great questions,
parents getting nothing, waits until the parent is in bed and then is suddenly standing there
as chatty as can be. And when I realized this was like near universal, like this was happening in
so many homes, I thought, okay, well, this is fascinating. And what I think is happening is
the teenager is satisfying two needs at once.
They wanna be autonomous,
but they wanna connect with the parent.
And so if they wait till we're in bed,
they decide if there's gonna be a meeting,
they decide the content of the meeting because they know we're not gonna bring up new topics
at that time and they decide when it ends.
So what I would say is,
maybe your kid's not a nighttime talker,
but I have become increasingly aware
there are kids who don't wanna talk when the parent wants to talk, but they will text with the parent or they will have conversations in the car, that they need a lot of tight control over the conversation in order to have it.
that comes up is that the teenager doesn't wanna talk because the parent stepped in it.
The parent did something when they did talk
that made the kid uncomfortable about opening up.
And when I've asked teenagers,
like, you know that thing where you're clearly upset
and your parents asking what's wrong
and you're just shaking them off, shaking them off.
They're like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm like, what's the deal?
Like, what's the deal? And they're like, well, yeah, yeah. I'm like, what's the deal? Like, what's the deal?
And they're like, well, there's a few different reasons.
So the reasons they give me, they say,
well, sometimes it's because we know what you're gonna say.
So I'm upset because I messed up my math test.
And it's the math test that you asked me if I was ready for.
And I told you I was, but it turns out I was not.
And so if I tell you that that's the issue,
I'm gonna basically get an, I told you so,
and I don't wanna hear it.
So I can't tell you.
Another reason they'll give me is they'll say,
you're gonna blab, right?
So I'm gonna tell you about something
that's happening for me or a friend.
And then the next thing I know,
you're gonna be on the horn either with the school
or with the neighbor or with your sister.
And I did not mean for this to leave the house.
And so I'm not telling you stuff.
And then I thought this was so beautiful.
And a girl said to me, here's the deal.
By the time I get home,
I am 90% of the way over whatever I was upset about
and rehashing the whole thing from my parents
is not gonna help me feel better.
So I think we sometimes wanna be attentive
that like they know us, we may have stepped in it.
And if we have, we have to apologize
and try to repair that.
And I think teenagers can be pretty forgiving.
If you're earnestly apologetic,
I think you can open channels of communication.
There's so much in that.
Yeah, I mean, allowing the teen to set the parameters
for these types of discussions, not trying to force them, There's so much in that. Yeah, I mean, allowing the teen to set the parameters
for these types of discussions, not trying to force them,
trying to refrain from judgment or stepping into the,
you know, on these landmines that are typically the things
that cut off communication, right?
Resisting the urge to try to solve the problem
or step in and intervene,
or like tell some story about what happened to you
when you were that age, which is like the worst, right?
You wanna end the conversation.
I would say like-
That's the last thing they wanna hear, right?
When I was a teenager
is like the most conversation ending thing
you can possibly say as a parent.
You know.
When I was a teenager.
I know.
I mean, I've just learned,
cause we have a quieter child and it's funny
cause just the other night,
like that exact thing happened,
like right when I was going to bed, you know?
And you have to just, like you live for those moments
because you can't compel them.
So you have to like be in a place
of sort of surrender around it.
And then when they happen, you have to have the awareness like,
oh, okay, I have to turn on now
because this is a fleeting thing.
It doesn't happen that often.
It requires a lot of patience.
It does, it really, really does.
So here's how I think we summon that patience.
First of all, this is really short-lived.
And one of the things I'm so glad about
is that I was practicing before I had kids
and I had so many people I was caring for,
so many parents say, oh my gosh, it goes so fast.
Like they're out so fast.
Because my personality is a bit more
on the controlling side.
And I know that if I didn't have that professional reminder
all of the time of how short lived this would be,
I know I would have been like, clean up your shoes,
they're in the wrong place and let me go to sleep.
I mean, I know I would have demanded more in that way.
And so, and now I have a kid in college, right?
And it's true.
And so for me in those moments where I'm like,
oh, really right now, I think, you know what?
In three years, I would give my left arm
to have you come in to talk to me, right?
Like I'm not gonna know where you are
at 11 o'clock at night.
So I think that helps.
And then the other thing I think is more important
than it's ever been is that the single most powerful force
for adolescent mental health is strong relationships
with caring adults.
So we have to meet them more than halfway.
We just have to.
I think most parents are caring,
but they don't know how to deploy that care
in a helpful manner, right?
It goes back to good intentions gone awry.
So when they say, you know how school,
which I do every day, like I make all these mistakes.
It's very, by the way, it's very refreshing
that you spent your entire life studying this stuff still.
Oh, God.
You know, it gets it wrong.
But yeah, of course, I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I feel like they need to know that they're safe.
I try to, you try to reserve judgment.
Like to me, maintaining that open channel of communication
is the most important thing.
And the minute you inject any kind of like judgment into it
or attitude about like a certain behavior or thing,
like that's only gonna restrict,
that's gonna, like you said earlier,
it's gonna make them think twice
about opening up to you next time.
Yeah, it's funny.
The thing, you know, my favorite thing to do
is to be with teenagers and just ask, you know, like,
what does that adults do that doesn't work for you?
Or what is it that adults don't understand?
And one thing I've been hearing from them a lot
is don't compare us. Don't compare us.
I think so often again, in a well-meaning way,
parents are like, you know, your brother didn't do that.
Or, you know, why can't you be more like,
or when I was a teenager, like I did.
And it just rubs them the wrong way so much.
You know, Betty's son is doing great.
Yeah, what's up with you?
You know, and again, I'm with you.
I don't think any parent is setting out
to do wrong by their kid.
Like I think we are desperate to do right by our kids.
And there's almost nothing in parenting
that I would point to that is not well-intentioned.
But the best thing about teenagers
is that they will tell us straight up
what does and does not work for them.
And I think we need to take it seriously.
So we talked a little bit about the managing
of the emotions part,
and then there's the regaining control aspect.
How are teens, what are they looking to kind of self-regulate
like is it taking a bath with essential oils
or is it going on a video game for six hours
or sticking their head in a bong?
Like it can be all of these different things, right?
And I thought what was really interesting in the book was,
look, if a kid has a hard day and they come home
and then there's one example of one teen
who then plays a video game for an hour or whatever,
and that's what he needs to kind of like down-regulate.
And then he gets what he needs out of it.
And then he's ready to like focus on his homework
or like, you know, he's okay, right?
That's very different from the person
who can't stop scrolling or has a more malignant relationship
to whether it's technology or substance or whatever it is.
And so from the parental point of view,
again, it goes back to how do you discern
the healthy response versus the unhealthy one?
So there's two ways to slice this.
One is we really have to be deliberate
about allowing teaming efforts
to be seen as a healthy response at all.
Like I think our culture is so much defaulted right now
to if my kid's upset, the right,
the script I'm operating on is they come home,
they tell me what they're upset about.
I give them good advice.
They feel better.
That's the script.
Yeah, it's a terrible script.
Right, or rarely, it just doesn't happen that often, right?
So the first thing we have to do is actually expand our understanding
of what the options are.
So ways that kids can manage a bad day
that are entirely acceptable
in the canon of psychological research
would be coming home
and rolling around on the floor with the dog for a while,
right?
Or coming home and going for a run
because that helps them feel better
or taking a shower
or maybe hopping on a video game just for a little while.
What we're always gonna measure
is whether there's a cost associated, right?
So there's a lot of ways that kids regulate emotion
that first of all, we don't even recognize and value
that I think we need to.
And then if a parent starts to be uncomfortable,
like, I don't know,
they've been on the video game for a while, right?
This is going on and on.
The way to evaluate it is what's the cost of this, right?
Is there work they're supposed to be doing?
Have they been sedentary for a long time?
Are they not seeing friends?
And that's the measure.
Like we just don't want there to be a price tag
attached to what kids do.
But the fun thing about caring for teenagers
and getting to write about them is to really celebrate,
like they're good at regulating emotion.
And one of the big ones, huge in the lives of teenagers
is actually music, you know, that they will come home
and they'll use it both to express emotion
and actually to contain emotion.
So it happens all the time that if a kid is sad,
like I would say most teenagers have a sad playlist.
Like they actually collect this music
that they will come home or wherever they are,
they'll be sad and they will deliberately put
on their sad playlist with the intention
of crying alongside it to express the emotions
so that they can get to feeling better faster.
And it works beautifully, harmless, effective.
The same teenager or other teenagers
will sometimes actually have mood countering music.
Like they'll be in a bad place or they'll have low energy.
And so they have their upbeat or pump up
or I had a teenager described as yeah, yeah, yeah playlist.
That was a great name.
And so they're always using these extraordinary
adaptive tools. And I think as always using these extraordinary, you know, adaptive tools.
And I think as adults, we too often miss it.
And we think, why aren't they talking to us
about their feelings?
When in fact, they've got such good stuff going on.
How do you get them to be so open with you?
Oh, well, first of all, I'm not their parent.
Yeah, I mean.
Yeah.
Second of all, they know it's time limited.
I also think, and I'm sad about this.
I also think it's not that often
that teenagers encounter adults
who are absolutely fascinated by them
in a totally benign way.
And I hope it is totally benign.
I believe it is.
We're pretty biased against teenagers as
a culture. Like you can say about teenagers things you could and never should say. You
shouldn't say about teenagers, about any other group, right? I mean, people are wholesale
dismissive of teenagers. You know, they're so impulsive. They're so difficult. You know, I mean,
it's extraordinary actually what we allow ourselves to say about teenagers.
And teenagers are well aware of that,
that adults often cast a sort of unpleasant eye on them.
And I am absolutely convinced
that teenagers can smell at 300 yards,
adults who don't regard them with a whole lot of respect.
And they can also smell at 300 yards,
adults who, honestly, I just love them.
It's clear, I mean, your curiosity,
your fascination with them.
Yeah.
It's very, it's disarming.
Oh, well, and I think for teenagers, they're like,
all right, lady, like you're like really asking.
Yeah, like we're-
So we will really tell you.
Right.
Yeah.
Somebody just had to ask earnestly, right?
And you like seem to really want an answer
and you're not gonna fight us when we tell you the answer.
Right.
I was speaking at a school recently
to a upper school, high school.
And I heard, I had a great conversation with the teenagers.
Like we had a great time,
but I heard after the fact that they were like,
oh, we have a speaker.
Oh man, she can talk to us about social media.
Like that they were just waiting
to just have a grownup come down on them.
Like they're so accustomed to it.
Right.
So we can't pivot to talk about social media right now.
Well, let's go back to the COVID thing.
I mean, that was a big impetus for you writing this book.
And obviously there's no shortage of press out there about what's happening with teens
that is a direct or indirect result of lockdowns
and what everyone experienced,
the rates of loneliness and depression and suicide, et cetera
are like through the roof, it's pretty alarming.
So how are you thinking about this?
Like, give me your take on what it is
that teens specifically had to endure
during that period of time and the sort of short
and long-term impact that it's having on their development.
Yeah, I mean, it was, I had in my home,
I had a high schooler and a elementary school student.
So I was living with it in my home, I had a high schooler and a elementary school student. So I was living with it in my home.
And the isolation alone was torture for a lot of teenagers.
They are just not designed to be stuck at home
with their parents.
It's really the opposite of what they should be doing.
And we saw all sorts of things, right?
Incredibly sad teenagers.
We saw an explosion of eating disorders
and huge anxiety that in some ways
we've seen the aftermath of the anxiety
or the impact of that more now
that we're asking kids to be out in the world, right?
When kids were required to be at home,
they were anxious, but they weren't asked to do anything.
So their anxiety didn't actually get stirred up. But we are seeing now across like
all districts, like regardless of socioeconomic status, incredible school truancy or chronic
absenteeism, or, you know, you can call it a lot of things, but kids just not going to school.
Like that is something we are continuing to see. So there were things we know we saw in the pandemic.
There's some things we know we're seeing now.
So we are seeing the school truancy question.
I think we're still waiting on the data
on what the longer term effects will be.
There was a report that just came out
that was very concerning that reported a lot of,
it was the CDC report, a lot of loneliness,
a lot of despair. What's CDC report, a lot of loneliness, a lot of despair.
What's tricky about that report is those data were collected in the fall of 2021.
And they were asking about mood over the previous year. So when those data came out in February of
this year, I went and actually looked at some writing I had done around that time in the fall
of 2021 about where were teenagers. They were so miserable, where we're teenagers, they were so miserable.
Like as a group, they were so miserable
because what was happening for them
as they were starting their third school year
disrupted by the pandemic.
And so even kids who were going back,
they were often going back in masks,
which they had strong feelings about.
A lot of kids were really anxious about returning socially.
A lot of kids were really scared about getting COVID.
And even the kids for whom things on the surface looked really good, they were telling me they're
going to take it all away. Like we're going to settle back in and it's going to all get ripped
away from us again. So I'm grateful for those data because they map on to what we were seeing
at the time. And I think the thing that's so hard is there's such a long lag between the collection of the data
and the release of the data.
So I'm very eager to see,
you know, what we find out in a year
because anecdotally we're seeing like in general,
kids who are able to go to school
and are back at school in general,
like they look pretty good, right?
We have kids who continue to suffer tremendously
more than there were before the pandemic,
but there also was were before the pandemic,
but there also was suffering before the pandemic.
And we have kids who without question were knocked off
of their developmental trajectory by the pandemic.
But on the whole, a lot of teenagers
are looking like teenagers,
in the ways that I have recognized for my whole career.
So we're still trying to figure it out.
Right, so that study, I mean, I saw a study recently,
I don't know if it's the same one that said something like
six out of 10 girls were reported being persistently sad
or hopeless or something like 30% of teen girls
had contemplated suicide.
I don't know if that's the same one.
It's the same study.
So it's reporting back from that period of time.
So then the question becomes, how resilient are they?
Are they bouncing back or not?
You know, what can we learn and what, you know,
where might we be going wrong
by reading too much into this, I suppose.
That is a worry I have,
which is when those data come out and a lot of the way it gets reported
leaves readers with the impression
these are fresh numbers.
I think it's very scary to parents.
And then I have concerns as a psychologist
of like, well, if we terrify parents,
that does not actually make it easier
for them to serve as a steady presence
in the face of adolescent emotionality.
So there's this very delicate dance
of both wanting to raise awareness,
making sure we are incredibly attentive to warning signs.
And when we should be very concerned about teenagers
and speeding them towards care versus also not-
Projecting all of that.
Putting everybody on the ceiling.
Right.
The other wrinkle to that also has to do
with gender differences, which we haven't talked about yet.
In the most general sense,
girls are gonna be more likely
to kind of report their emotions, right?
Whereas boys process these challenging times differently and perhaps are
more likely to be acting out than reporting that they're anxious or depressed or sad, right? So
that also skews the viability of those data points. Yeah, right. I mean, so these are self-report
studies. So they're asking about distress. The girls who were surveyed reported a great deal
of distress. Exactly what you said. We would expect to see the corollary. One of the rules
in psychology is girls collapse in on themselves under distress. Boys tend to act out.
I don't know that you're going to get a super faithful accounting all the time of boys
describing all of the ways they were hard on their family or the people around them as an
expression of distress.
And so the girls do come out looking pretty bad relative to boys,
but I'm not sure that's a very detailed
or subtle or nuanced picture
of what was happening for boys
who also can mask their sadness just by withdrawal.
Right, but even under the most kind of liberal
or generous review of that study or those data points,
it's clear like, it's not great.
No, it's not great.
No matter how you split it, like it's a shit show
and we should be paying attention
and try to understand what was driving that
and how to kind of course correct that, right?
Like similarly, we had a now 15, 13 year old
and it was really hard, really hard, like very lonely and very difficult. Similarly, we had now 15, 13 year old,
and it was really hard, really hard, like very lonely and very difficult.
And of course the isolation is gonna drive more screen time,
more social media usage, which is then compelling
that person to be in that mode of comparison.
And these people are living their lives this way,
but I'm over here.
And like, that's driving low self-esteem.
Like there's a lot going on there, right?
So social media is not benign in any of this.
So how do you wrap your head around that
or speak about that when you go out
and talk to kids in schools and in your counseling?
So the social media research is complicated.
The views on it are complicated.
Here's my take on it.
I have a lot of thoughts about it, but here's some.
One is when I think about kids in the pandemic
and social media, part of me is like, thank goodness
they had a way to stay plugged in.
I mean, can you imagine if during our own adolescence,
we were stuck in the house like we were and like-
Three channels.
Three channels and one phone line, right?
I mean, that would have been even worse,
I think in many ways.
So their ability to stay connected had value.
The thing that made me nervous
and continues to make me very nervous about social media
is the algorithm driven nature of what kids are presented.
And so that anything a kid,
I think most people know this,
but I think it's still worth articulating,
actually anything a kid or that we spends time looking at
or searches for or likes or comments on,
the algorithms driving these social media platforms
will pick that data up
and then present them more of that
in the aim of getting them to not be able to look away.
And what I think about with those algorithms are norms,
that teenagers are very vulnerable
to the norms in their environment.
And so when I think back to the,
like the eating disorders finding,
where we just saw so many eating disorders
in the pandemic, there's a pretty decent consensus
that probably what drove a lot of that
is that we have kids who are home,
they have tons of time on their hands,
they have tons of like energy to do something.
So they do a little searching for fitness
or weight control or whatever.
The algorithms pick this up and start flooding their feeds
with imagery related to dieting or advice on dieting.
And in the absence of leaving the home,
doing other things, looking at other people,
this becomes the norm.
And it no longer seems strange to ultra diet,
do things that are actually really, really dangerous.
And so when I worry about social media,
what I worry about is that it can shift the norms for kids
and change what they think to be typical.
And so there were a couple of situations
that I was aware of clinically
where it was actually the older sister
who went to parents about,
I think it was in both cases, a 13 year old boy saying,
you all need to know,
he went down a white supremacy rabbit hole
and is way down it.
And the parents like didn't know,
didn't really have a way to know.
But for these boys who are home, nothing else going on,
this becomes normed and things that should be horrifying
start to just become kind of standard.
Right, gets normalized.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's really scary.
Obviously in the teen girl context,
it's issues around body dysmorphia, et cetera,
that can be quite pernicious.
But there's something particularly scary
about the lonely disenfranchised young male teen
who is looking for an identity and is vulnerable
and stumbles upon, whether it's Andrew Tate
or some other kind of emblem of toxic masculinity
that is then telling that person,
something that's nourishing them in a negative way,
unbeknownst to oversight or parents or anything like that.
I mean, this is pervasive, right?
And that young person who can kind of unbeknownst
to their parents or whoever for a period of time
is down a certain kind of rabbit hole
like that, this becomes a very volatile,
potentially dangerous situation.
Like Scott Galloway talks about this all the time.
Like the lonely young man can be a very dangerous thing
and there is a certain type of crisis
around that right now.
Yeah, no, we're worried about that.
And yet in the spirit of not terrifying parents
and leaving it there,
one of the things I would say is make sure you know
what's on your kids for you page of TikTok, right?
I mean, that there are ways for parents
to acquaint themselves with what's-
That's tricky though.
That is very, as a, like I can tell you,
there's all kinds of Finsta accounts
and like multiple accounts, like I,
it's very hard for a parent to like
delicately dance around that.
Like you want your child to have some autonomy
and respect their privacy, not be invasive
while also being able to kind of monitor that
is easier said than done.
It is true, it is true.
The other thing I would say is delay, delay
as much as you can on social media.
When I talk with high schoolers, they're like,
we're not the ones you need to be worried about,
it's the seventh graders.
And I think that's often- Why is that?
I think that they're, you know,
seventh graders are, you know, 12 to 13,
they're very concrete in their thinking.
They're not necessarily able to stand back
from what they're looking at
and wonder like what is behind this
or why might this be happening?
I don't think it's true
that the high schoolers are entirely insulated
from it anymore,
but I also take them at their word
that if you really wanna worry about this,
like you should be worried about the seventh graders
or the eighth graders who are going down these roads.
And one thing parents can consider
is when kids are asking for access,
a lot of times it's so they can stay connected
and be connected.
And a lot of times having the ability to text their friends
will go pretty far for a while.
That when we give kids technology or we give kids phones,
I don't think
parents should feel like they hand over the whole thing at once. You can give, I have given a young
teenager a phone that has no browser, no social media apps, the ability to text and ride that as
long as you can while the brain is developing and perspective is coming in. Yeah, you talk about this in the book, like the young person is so desperate
to get onto these social media apps
that you're in a position of power to dictate terms, right?
So you're like, okay, well, we'll do that.
But then I'm gonna have to have the login credential.
And so like, they'll agree to that
because they wanna be online so badly.
Absolutely.
I missed that whole boat by the way.
Well, a lot of parents do, right?
I mean, it's mostly it's a hazard
to be a psychologist parent.
Occasionally though, it gives me the leg up, right?
Because I've seen these things before
I have to do them in my own home.
And I think truly what it is,
is that kids wanna be able to show their friends
they have the device.
I mean, often like that is more powerful
than I think a lot of adults realize. And so you truly can say, all right, they have the device. I mean, often like that is more powerful than I think a lot of adults realize.
And so you truly can say, all right, you want the device,
you can have the device,
and it will have all these parameters around it.
And it also will not go in your bedroom.
That's a great one to start with.
And if you can ride that all the way through high school,
that is fantastic.
But if that has already been breached,
good luck reversing that.
It is very hard to get that horse back in the barn.
I will be the first to admit.
So all those parents of younger kids out there,
this is a great rule to start with
as opposed to try to implement later.
And kids will agree to anything
to get their hands on the device.
So make the most of your leverage in that moment.
Yeah, I often think about the ratio,
like it's how you interface and use these things, right?
Like, are you using them to create or to consume?
Like in a very binary sense,
like are you like on Photoshop and making cool photo,
you know, sharing, making videos that you can share.
Is there some kind of creative stimulation aspect to it
where you're contributing
or are you just receiving and consuming?
And then beyond that on the kind of social piece,
I found to your point about how teenagers
are so creatively adaptive, like during the pandemic,
and even now I found like our kids will just have FaceTime
on with their friend and like they're not, it's just on in the room
while they're doing homework or doing whatever else.
So they feel connected to somebody else
even though they're alone in their room.
And maybe they'll talk to each other here and there,
but it's just like this idea like,
oh, we're together even though we're not together.
Yeah.
Like that's a use case that I don't think any adult
would have ever conceptualized,
but I think that's a pretty common thing now, right?
Absolutely.
Which is cool.
Like, I think that's a good,
like that's a cool workaround for that piece of technology.
Yeah, no, it's very sweet.
I know a lot of kids who study that way, you know,
and I've entertained it myself at times.
So not, you know, you have a big bunch of work
and you feel sort of isolated with it.
If you weren't alone, you'd feel better.
It's an interesting,
I'll tell you where it takes a very interesting turn
is it can make adolescent romances very wall to wall.
You know, that when teenagers are dating one another,
it's not uncommon for them to wake up, text each other,
good morning, have each other on all the time,
be in constant contact.
I mean, honestly, vastly more connection
than I have with my own spouse.
Right, sounds terrible.
They like it.
But then what's interesting is if the relationship ends,
I mean, the size of the hole it leaves
in the young person's life is just enormous
because they have had such pervasive connection.
What about the notion of, you know,
group identity and the politics around that?
Like, I just can't fathom being a teenager
and being able to know what everyone in my class
is doing all the time.
You know, whether I'm included, whether I'm dis-included,
and if I'm dis-included, being able to like,
see them out in the world doing that thing
that I wasn't invited to do.
And then in the comments section, everybody, you know,
taking others down a peg and the bullying that happens there, like, it just sounds horrific. I know, you know, taking others down a peg and the bullying
that happens there, like, it just sounds horrific.
I know, I know.
Don't you look at that and think, oh, we were so lucky.
100%.
So lucky, like we were just naive
to all the things we weren't invited to and missed it all.
The psychic pain that that must cause.
And you must see that in your practice every day.
I do.
And I truly will say, it's interesting.
There are things that we can collapse that we don't wanna collapse.
So we don't wanna collapse social media or technology.
Cause like you say, like these have a lot of facets
that are interesting and often adaptive for kids.
And we also don't wanna collapse teenager
because truly 12, 13, 14 is so different from 16, 17, 18 in terms of their ability to
navigate these things. So where I would say that really exquisite pain around what you're just
describing, that's younger teens, 12, 13, 14, because they are still working so hard to establish
identity and they are still trying to figure out where they fit in and they don't have that solidified usually yet.
And so it is exquisitely painful
and they are watching that so, so, so attentively.
Whereas typically,
and this is a little delayed by the pandemic,
but it's I think coming back to more
the norms we've known before.
By sophomore year, 15 years old,
kids tend to be like, nope, I know who my friends are
and I know what we're up to.
And I'm not so anxious about what everybody else is doing.
And so just in terms of trying to narrow the scope
of when parents wanna be really attentive about this
or when they wanna worry
or when they wanna try to delay, delay, delay on access,
it's not all of adolescents. It's I would say to delay, delay, delay on access. It's not all of adolescence.
It's, I would say through seventh, eighth,
maybe early ninth grade where that is the hardest.
I'm just imagining the marginalized kid
who isn't invited then goes home
and compulsively goes online to see,
to kind of bear witness to the thing
that he was, you know, dis-included from.
And that only feeds like a deeper sense of insecurity
and, you know, lowering the self-esteem, et cetera.
And, you know, yes, as you get a little bit older
and you kind of emerge out of that,
but that's gonna calcify, right?
And then that's gonna become very difficult to repair
once that sense of self-identity kind of cements.
It could be, it could be.
Whereas prior to that, sorry to interrupt,
but like prior to that, yeah, they're just included,
but they go home and they forget about it
because they have other things that nourish them
outside of the classroom.
But to your point earlier, like you're never away.
Like you're always connected.
You're always on.
Yeah.
And that piece, I mean, it's just so much information,
right, to try to metabolize and take in.
What I will say is thank goodness
for the kids you're describing.
We are now back in a position where there could be activities
that that kid could be participating in,
things that could be set up in terms of afterschool.
So maybe it's not going great
with the pure landscape at school,
but then I would say,
get that kid busy with other things, right?
That they need to be in traffic patterns
where they're around other kids,
where they may find other friends.
And part of what was so horrible about the pandemic
is that all of that went away.
And the other thing that went away
that we don't talk about nearly enough
is that part of what is so important for teenagers
is actually connection with caring adults outside the home.
That so much of what's good for teenagers
happens with like the fabulous teacher,
the fabulous coach or the great boss or whatever.
And teenagers lost all that too in the pandemic.
And so when we're looking for explanations
of where things wanna arrive for teenagers,
that's one that I think like deserves a lot more
consideration than we've given it.
Yeah.
I think that's a really important point
that the impact of coaches, mentors, teachers,
like it takes a village kind of thing.
And even before the pandemic,
we have seen the kind of exacerbation of isolation,
the dissolution of the kind of village notion
of how we live and certainly in Los Angeles, it's so dispersed.
The notion of community is theoretical at best.
So I think there's a general kind of denigration
of that notion that COVID and the lockdowns
and all of that just exacerbated.
And now even on the other side of it, we still haven't,
I mean, we're still kind of in the wake of it, right?
Like still it's like, well, we'll Zoom for that
instead of go to per like we've acclimated
to certain lifestyle habits because of that experience
that I don't think are necessarily all that healthy
and definitely not in service to the young people.
I think that's right.
So then if we think about, okay, well,
so there's an opening,
I think about all of us looking at these youth
mental health headlines worried about the crisis.
And what I would say is,
even if you're not yourself raising teenagers,
you can help with this, right?
That there are ways in which adults
can make meaningful connections with teenagers,
either through mentorship or being a great boss or being an incredible neighbor
or an incredible uncle, right?
I mean, sometimes teenagers will have
like really powerful relationships with family members
who aren't their parents
that will help them through incredible things.
Sure, they need that
because they can't hear it from their parents.
Like their parents are not supposed to be the people
who are kind of, let me sit you down and give you the life advice. They don't wanna hear from their parents. Like the parents are not supposed to be the people who are kind of, let me sit you down
and give you the life advice.
They don't wanna hear from their parents,
but they will hear it from that other elder
that they sort of respect and maybe revere
who just has that ability to connect with them
that a parent will never be able to have.
Yeah, no, I would say a huge percentage
of my clinical work is saying the exact same thing
that the parents themselves would say or have said.
But they can hear it from you.
But they can get it from me.
Yeah, I mean, I'm like,
I'm sorry that I need to charge you for this
because you are covering this at home,
but this, yeah, that's a lot of the work.
Yeah, and when those moments arise
and the kid is talking to you,
you know, another mantra that I always use is just tell me more.
Like, instead of, let me tell you how to fix this,
or I can't believe you, like judgment,
like, you know, like not trying to solve the problem,
not telling them what they did wrong,
but just, oh, that must be hard.
Like, tell me more about what that must be like.
Like if I can, and I'm not saying I'm great at this,
but when I can do that,
like that seems to be something that will,
create a little bit of a safe zone
that will make the kid open up even a little bit more.
Yeah, I'll tell you my version of that is
I always work with the assumption
that teenagers have two sides,
that they have the side that maybe did the dumb thing
and it's impulsive and maybe immature
and maybe self-centered.
And they also have a side that is philosophical
and broad-minded and an excellent self-advocate
and deeply thoughtful.
And so even when a kid is telling me
about something that feels
like they should totally not have done that
or like it was just a really bonehead move.
One of the ways I'll try to engage it
is I'll try to talk to the broad-minded side
about what happened.
Like, gosh, that's so not like you.
Like, what do you make of that?
Like, how do you understand that you did that?
And I find they usually rise to it.
Like that the side of the teenager you talk to
is the side you end up in conversation with.
So if you come down on them like, what was that?
Well, then you're gonna get,
you don't understand that reactive part of the teenager.
And if you, even if you don't see it,
if you talk to that vastly more mature side,
it will usually show up.
And how do you balance that against the idea that,
you know, young people need guardrails.
They wanna, you know, they feel more secure
when they know there are rules and there's, you know,
ramifications for breaking those rules.
And not that anybody should be
some kind of rigorous taskmaster,
but there is wisdom in kind of reinforcing
some kind of framework
around what's okay and what's not.
And there's, you know,
there's ramifications for those breaches.
I think they can live side by side.
So when we look at the research
and when we distill all of it on like what kids need at home,
it's two things, they need warmth and they need structure.
So I think you can actually bring both.
So say a kid does something really
that they should not have done.
You can have the structure of saying,
all right, that comes with consequences, right?
You know, it was a breach of trust.
We gotta be able to trust you to let you go out and about.
So you will be hanging out with us
for the next couple of weekends.
And then the warmth can come and be like, what happened?
Like, that's so not like you, like it's not an either or.
And I would just say, you know, if parents are like,
where am I supposed to be in all of this?
If they just keep going back to that idea,
you wanna be warm, you wanna feel,
you want your kids to feel that you both love them
and also actually like them.
And you wanna have structure,
that there should be a predictability to family life,
that the rules should make sense, that the rules should be a predictability to family life,
that the rules should make sense,
that the rules should be enforced,
that kids are gonna know what's gonna happen.
And kids do like rules, teenagers do like rules.
They don't like loosey goosey adults.
I think all the time about moments in my practice
where a teenager would float in front of me,
something like, oh, you know, we were over at Susie's house
and Susie's mom will buy for us.
And they put it out in this way, like, you know,
and I would go, really?
And they go, I know, it's so weird.
I don't know why she does that.
And I've learned that they'll often present something
kind of neutrally to like check to see how you respond.
And even when they've seemed to be neutral
to like positive about it,
if I've stayed with my gut and been like, what?
They're like, thank you, right?
They're so glad.
I think of another example,
I was caring for the kid of a pediatrician in my community.
And it came up that she was having,
her boyfriend was staying overnight in her bedroom
and they were in high school.
So in America, like that's not really very typical.
And I said, oh, your folks are okay with that?
And she said, I know, I don't know why they are.
And she had presented it like,
this is just kind of happening. And when I called the question, it turns out she was asking me a question and she had presented it like, yeah, this is just kind of happening.
And when I called the question,
it turns out she was asking me a question
and telling me about it.
That's super interesting, wild.
Yeah, the best thing, here's the thing about teenagers.
They are like so able to detect dishonesty and hypocrisy,
like so much better than at any point in life,
like better than kids, better than adults.
And they really, really respect honesty.
Like they really respect it.
And so sometimes if I'm doing an intake
with a kid who's in my office
because they've gotten themselves in trouble with drinking
or something like that,
I will say, are you worried about your drinking?
Like that's usually how I'll start by asking. or something like that, I will say, are you worried about your drinking?
Like that's usually how I'll start by asking.
And sometimes kids will say, actually, yes, you know, and then we're off to one conversation.
And sometimes they'll say, no, or I don't know.
And I will say, I don't know yet how I feel about your drinking.
I'm just going to keep you posted.
But based on what you're telling me, I'm not so sure that this is working for you or that this is safe, what you're describing.
And I'm amazed by how accepting they are of that.
Like they would so much rather you play your cards face up,
even if they don't like your cards,
than have it seem like you're bluffing.
Yeah, I mean, I think the bullshit detector
is super finely tuned, you know, at that age and is very strategically
and effectively weaponized against the parent
at just the right time.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like they know, cause no parents perfect, right?
And teenagers are paying attention
and they know a lot more about who you are
and how you behave
than you might realize.
And people in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.
And so when the parent comes down on the teen,
don't be surprised when the barb that comes back
is just absolutely savage.
Yeah, and dead on.
Right, savage in the most honest and like insightful way
that will bring you to your knees.
It'll be brutal.
And I have in myself, I'm compulsively honest.
Like I just like, okay.
And I think that's why I like teenagers.
Cause I feel like if I'm doing right by them,
like if they feel like I'm all right by them,
then I feel like that I must be on the right.
That's a very insightful thing to understand, I think.
Yeah, no, they have very high standards
and you can lose their faith quickly.
But it was interesting.
I was at a school where I was asking kids
what they wanted me to tell their parents
when I met with their parents later in the evening.
And they said all sorts of things
that I thought were fair and I was writing them down.
And one kid said, could you tell my parents
to please remove all the screen time restrictions?
And I said, yeah, I'm not doing that.
And she was like, okay.
Like she would have really thought blessed me
if I was like, sure.
I gave it a shot.
Yeah, I was like, she was like, okay.
And so I encourage people to just play their cards
face up with teenagers.
One final thing I wanted to ask you about the COVID stuff
before we move off of that completely
is something I've noticed around just how teens
are kind of processing and dealing with a low grade kind of chronic fear.
Like if COVID did anything,
it kind of taught young people like,
the world's a scary place, you should be afraid,
there's this invisible thing out there that might harm you
and you need to wear masks or stay at home
or stay away from people.
And then on top of that,
policy decisions that were controversial
and maybe we can't trust adults to do the right thing.
And it creates a very insecure,
kind of unstable perspective of the world
as your mind is developing.
And that kind of residue of that, I think still persists.
Like, there are kids who even now
it seems relatively safe or, you know, like,
but they insist on wearing masks when they're outdoors
and things like that.
And I was like, what is going on?
Like, you know, this is like not a healthy, you know,
way to kind of navigate the world thinking
that a terrible thing could happen at any moment.
And we should all be very afraid all the time.
Like that has to be the mentality
that would drive that kind of behavior.
Yeah, I mean, I really don't know
that we've wrapped our heads around
how the pandemic rocked us.
And I think actually for a lot of people
it was a real loss of innocence,
around like how the world operates.
And I mean, I think so,
if we think back to like,
I'd place it around March 13th, 14th of 2020,
when you were living your life one way, one day,
and then completely upended the next.
So I think it has jarred teenagers.
And I think there are kids who started to use avoidance
and withdrawal as a way to manage that distress and that stuck.
And then that can happen.
Avoidance feeds anxiety.
The more you avoid what you fear,
the more you become afraid of it and continue to avoid.
But I think there's also something even bigger than that,
which is teenagers, like they follow the news.
And unfortunately for them and for all of us,
the news is with us now all day, every day.
And they think about things like climate change.
They think about gun violence a lot.
There are a lot of kids who are really anxious
every day in school because of fears around guns.
And I know there's questions
about like this mental health concern,
the rising mental health concerns we're seeing.
Is it the sort of the times and if it's a mate
and people will say, well, but there was like,
we grew up in the cold war where there was always a sense
of like possible nuclear war.
And then there was the world war II before that.
And I think, and so people will dismiss the kind of,
do me explanation for why teenagers are distressed.
But I think like, okay, but when I was a teenager,
the Cold War came to mind every once in a while, right?
If I happen to read a paper about it, catching it,
it wasn't all my-
Except when the day after.
Oh, that was horrible.
Which is the worst and I'll never forget that.
But okay, so that was a single exposure to media about it.
And like the jarring impact it had on us, right?
Whereas kids now are-
All day long every day.
All day long.
When I say to teenagers,
here's what you need to understand
about why this is so stressful for you.
I said, it used to be that there was the morning paper
and the evening news and nothing in between.
And they can't even believe it.
And what a gift that was too.
So I think that there's both the jarring reality
of having a virus upend our lives,
which is not something any of us,
I mean, we knew theoretically,
but like it was like Hollywood movie,
it wasn't a real thing.
But I also think we have to acknowledge
that there are very frightening things
that teenagers, I think in particular feel saddled with,
like school violence and also the climate crisis
as it unfolds, that they also are confronted with a lot
in a given day.
Yeah, it is a lot.
And it's the persistent nature of it.
Like it's just dripping into their awareness
constantly all day long.
And they're fed by algorithms that are, you know,
prioritizing extreme hits like that.
Yeah, yeah.
So what do we do?
So part of what I think is there have to be parameters
around how much kids have their phones, right?
And so this is why I love not having them in bedrooms,
if you can set that up.
Why I love it when kids are busy,
not overscheduled, but busy,
you know, doing stuff that just has them engaged,
has them in theater groups, has them in sports,
has them making things, has them helping in the community.
We're not getting rid of technology in kids' lives.
I think the goal so much in parenting
is to make sure that it doesn't dominate a kid's day.
One of the things that I loved that you initially ask
a kid who comes into your office is how you're sleeping.
Right.
It's like before we even do anything
or talk about anything,
like what does your self-care look like?
Like, are you even able to be present with me?
Cause you're not, are you overlooking
like one of the most fundamental things
about just being okay in your body?
Yeah, no, it's funny.
I'm almost hesitant to talk about sleep
because I think everybody knows it.
We've all heard it.
We know we're supposed to do it.
And yet the data on it are so ridiculously clear about it
being the glue that holds us together. And in that story in the book, it's about a kid whose
best friend has been killed in an accident. The kid is devastated, of course, and there's going
to be a lot of work to do to help him through. But I have learned clinically that when people
are in crisis especially,
I will start with the question of sleep.
And if they're sleeping, we will get down to work
on working through the crisis.
And if they're not sleeping,
I will get down to work on figuring out
how to help them sleep so that we even have a chance
of getting them through.
And I think that this is something that we underestimate.
And one of the questions that comes up a lot now
is like, what about kids where they can't get care?
Like they actually need care and they can't get care.
And it's getting better, but it's still not great.
And part of what contributed
to the adolescent mental health crisis
was both the surge in need
and the reality that caring for teenagers is a highly specialized field.
Very few of us do it.
And it's basically impossible to scale up the workforce.
And so the two together made
for a really tough situation for teenagers.
So there have been a lot of teenagers on wait lists.
There still are a lot of teenagers on wait lists.
And what I'll say to parents is,
look, it's not a substitute for therapy,
but make sure your kid is sleeping.
Make sure your kid is physically active.
Make sure they're eating well enough.
Have them do purposeful things.
Put them in positions
where they're doing service or activities.
These things don't take the place
of a really good clinician doing really good work,
but they go very, very far,
often in both reducing mental health concerns
and certainly in helping to prevent them.
It's the low hanging fruit.
I mean, if I'm not sleeping or I'm not exercising
or eating right or hydrating
or doing any number of those things,
I'm gonna feel depressed and like shit.
Absolutely.
So we can go down a therapeutic rabbit hole,
but like fundamentally, like if you correct those things,
I'm not saying it's gonna solve somebody's,
you know, mental health crisis,
but at least it will get you to some kind of baseline
so you know what you're dealing with.
Absolutely, absolutely.
And what I love about that is, first of all,
we know it's true, like the data are so clear.
And second of all, it is what parents can do at home.
The parents don't have to feel helpless
when their kid is suffering.
It's hard when the phone's in the bedroom though.
I know.
Some late nights.
Okay, so let's hit this head on.
If you're like, but my kid already has the phone
in the room, I gotta get it out.
Like, what can you try?
Let me give you some suggestions.
No over promising here, but some suggestions.
I think first of all,
none of us should have our phones in our rooms. I don't have my phone in my room. And so one thing
a parent might do is to say, okay, we're making a family wide rule. Like it's all coming out for
all of us. And of course the teenager will be like, no, no, no, no, no. And the parent might
consider saying, look, it's bad for our sleep. It's bad for your sleep. Sleep is the glue that holds us together.
For us to take it out of our room
and not ask you to do the same,
it'd be like we got in the car and we put on our seat belts,
but we don't ask you to put on yours.
So you can make that case.
The other thing to try, and again, I-
Does that work?
Well, I'm offering these humbly.
I'm offering things, because I actually,
it means enough to me that I don't wanna just write it off.
I think the other thing to try is to say,
let's just do a two to three week experiment.
Like sometimes teenagers will agree to an experiment.
Like let's take it out of your room for a couple weeks
and here's a clock radio to replace all of the things
that you feel that it does.
And then see if after a couple of weeks,
there's not some agreement around this.
Here's the other thing, teenagers like to know the why.
And this is again, back to the bullshit detector.
Like they like to know the why.
Here's the why.
Because I said so?
No.
That doesn't work?
That will work, no, it'll work up to age 10,
but now we're talking teenagers, right?
So here's the why.
We have data showing that you do not actually get
as good a sleep in a room with technology in it.
And the reason for this that the researchers surmise,
and I think this is true,
is that we are all so Pavlovianly attached to our devices
that if they are present,
we are deploying a degree of energy to not engage with them. to our devices that if they are present,
we are deploying a degree of energy to not engage with them.
And I have such a vivid memory of becoming aware of this when one of my daughters was in a preschool,
well, they were both in this preschool,
I don't remember which kid it was,
where part of the weighed in for the preschool
was there was a period of time
where the parent was in the room with the child,
but kind of reading quietly in a corner.
And I would have my phone with me almost all the time.
I knew it was tacky to look at it,
so I wouldn't look at it,
but I could feel myself resisting the impulse.
And one day I left it in the car by accident.
And I remember sitting in the room with her
and being aware of how much more deeply present I was in the room
because I had no option of touching my phone.
Right, it removes that decision fatigue.
Yep, it's there.
And so researchers think that even while we are sleeping,
if there is a nearby phone,
a piece of our energy is being deployed
on not engaging with that thing.
And so we do not sleep as well.
That's equal parts depressing
that we have a lizard brain like that.
And also alarming.
I mean, it's a testament on just how powerful they are.
Right? Yep.
That's crazy.
Well, that's good advice.
I want to talk a little bit about dadding, being a dad.
I love that you address this in the book.
Of course I'm a dad.
It's to my mind a little bit confusing
about how to be a dad today
because cultural mores have shifted quite a bit.
So the model of like, you know,
the generation that proceeded us,
like what my dad, you know, embodied as a father figure
is now very different in terms of like expectations.
You have to be, you know,
you don't have to be the provider,
but there's sort of a,
oh, I'm gonna provide for my family
and I'm gonna be the head of household.
And I have to be strong and firm,
but I also have to be emotionally available
and I have to be able to go to all the school activities
at Tuesday at one o'clock in the afternoon.
And it feels like you kind of have to be all things
all the time, all at once,
which, you know, as somebody, I talked to a lot of dads
and I think there's a lot of dads who are confused
about how to fulfill all of those buckets
and be an effective dad to a teenager.
Yeah.
Well, it's interesting, because on the one hand,
I hate the sense of anyone feeling so spread thin, right?
Or having such a sense of like so much all at once
and a really strong sense of obligation
to try to meet it all and be so good at it.
On the other hand, a way we could turn this a little
is like how wonderful that dads are now under the umbrella of also being in the nurturing role.
You know, how sad that there was a period where dads were not included in that tent, you know, of being a nurturer within the family.
And what I would say is, again, our kids are not in the house that long.
It's short, it's really short
and I have a pretty high tolerance for the idea
that in the 18 years or so that they're living in our homes,
we're gonna be spread pretty thin
and it's easier I think to tolerate that
if you're like, this is really time limited,
like I'm not doing this this long.
And then if there's a day where any parent
of any gender is feeling like
I didn't bring my A game at every single thing,
what I would say is warmth and structure,
those are the two things we're trying to provide.
I don't think you can get an A plus on both on any day
because often you're doing one or the other,
they're trading off against each other a little bit.
So if you can go for like a B average, B minus average,
B plus average, like on your warmth and on your structure,
your ability to be present and engaged in a loving way
with your kids, your ability to help create
a predictable environment, kids will do the rest.
Like I think one of the coolest things about my job
is that sometimes I will in school consultation work,
I'll know a kid for a long time
and then I'll meet the parent and I'll be like,
wow, this kid is doing so well
in light of who these parents are.
That's a recurring theme in the book too.
It's like you meet with the kid
and the parents are all freaked out and you're like,
actually the kid's got this dialed
and like you people are the ones
who need to get your shit together.
A little bit sometimes.
And so what I hope parents take away from that
is like a sense of reassurance of like, really?
Like kids bend towards health.
Kids are often fundamentally adaptive
or if they're not getting it at home,
they will get
it somewhere, right? I mean, so many of us thrived in homes where life at home wasn't what it was
supposed to be, but we found fabulous teachers or fabulous mentors. So I know for sure that guilt
does not improve parenting and fear does not improve parenting. And so if those of us who are raising teenagers
can try to keep those two things under control,
we'll just do a better job.
I think I'm like, I have an inner teen
because I do the best that I can as a dad.
And then I missed up and I fuck like,
oh, I didn't handle that great.
And then I go on Instagram and I scroll through
and I see like, there's a lot of super dads in my feed
who post reels of them being amazing dads,
doing amazing things.
And then I feel like shit.
I feel like terrible dad.
And I'm like, I'm doing the thing that I'm like in my,
you know, I'm like trying to get my teen to stop doing.
You know, I'm no better than any of this.
None of us are, okay, but so then again, like-
Comparing myself.
What a great way then to have a conversation
with a teenager about it, right?
That we're not above the exact same thing
that we're wishing they would do less of, right?
And that's how you actually have
an effective conversation with them.
I talk about this in the book,
like having a conversation with a group of
teenagers where I was like, oh man, you know, my relationship with social media, like it's like a
slot machine. Like I'll go on and sometimes like I get lucky and I find something that makes me
happy. And sometimes I go on and there's something that makes me miserable. Or often I go on and like
I'm just scrolling and scrolling and I don't want to know what I'm looking for and I'm not finding
it and I'm wasting time.
I find those conversations with teenagers
are the most fruitful conversations with teenagers
because we are bearing the reality
that we all struggle to manage these technologies well.
And then you can actually have a real conversation.
Yeah, I liked how in the book you kind of address
trying to establish parity between parents
in terms of emotional availability, right?
Like this idea that, you know,
a kid will like pivot to one parent,
like this is the person that I can open up to,
but I can't to the other person.
And then that creates all kinds of like
communication confusion and it's sort of destabilizing.
And I know that like, you know, there's something,
there's gonna be natural aspects to that,
but as a dad, like trying to make sure
that my kid knows that I'm available for that
and trying to find ways of, you know,
getting in so that they feel safe talking to me
just as much as they would their mom
and not always being successful at that,
but that was helpful.
Good, I mean, you know,
there's always division of labor in families, that's okay.
What I was kind of new to me in the research
as I was working on the book was especially
in what you're describing about the importance of dads
being available to boys
to talk about feelings.
And, you know, we know that boys are socialized
to not talk about emotion as much as girls are.
And we know that that comes at a cost to them.
And one of the things that came clear
as I was working on the book is that for a lot of boys,
especially around like middle school,
as they're starting to consolidate a sense of masculinity,
a lot of them decide that talking about feelings is a girl thing to do.
And then say they're in a two parent heterosexual home,
say it's only ever the mom
who's actually talking about feelings
and trying to have conversations with her son about feelings.
It's so well-meaning,
but it actually can reinforce exactly what the boy believes
like see look, it's a girl thing.
And so, as I was thinking through,
like how do we help boys develop emotional fluency?
Really, really like the men in their lives,
whether it's a dad or teacher, coach,
any variety of men need to be the ones
talking about their own emotional experiences
and then asking boys about theirs,
if we are going to work against the stereotype
that feelings are for girls.
That's such a powerful point, yeah.
I stumbled upon it.
Like I really had not thought about it
until I sat down to work on this book.
Yeah, the other kind of amazing thing
that jumped out to me about boys
was around your discussion
relating to how girls sort of mature more quickly,
like two years beyond boys
at a certain stage of adolescence.
But then you have these people in the same classroom
and boys being competitive
and then just getting trounced by girls
because they're more developed than the boys.
And then what that does to boys self-esteem,
kind of telling them that they can't measure up
to these girls and then their inability
to communicate their emotions and their feelings,
particularly to a male role model.
And what does that,
how does that bear fruit later in life?
Yeah, no, I, that was a really interesting section
of the book to write because I was looking at the data
and I'm also looking at the phenomenology
of kids I care for.
And I'm like, look at this, like sixth, seventh grade,
because of the two year jump on puberty,
girls are crushing boys academically
because they have a neurological advantage. But on top of that,
and we don't talk about this very much,
they're also taller, stronger, faster
for the most part, like just on average.
And so these poor, like,
I really, I feel like I could have called the section,
like, it's really hard to be a sixth grade boy, right?
I mean, because they're getting beat at recess
and then they come back into the building
and they're getting beat in the
classroom. And it levels out, it changes over time. But in that juncture, it's really hard to
be a sixth grade boy. And of course, the girls are developing. And it's also the exact same moment
where we see sexual harassment begin in schools. And so I thought like, well, this is really
interesting because I can absolutely understand why a sixth grade boy who's getting it coming and going
and made to feel small and feeling competitive
and wanting to consolidate a sense of masculinity
might feel like, well, one route to that
is I'm gonna take these girls down a few pegs,
and comment in bullying ways that are sexualized.
And the thing that was so interesting
about writing that section, I was like,
how has nobody said this before?
Like I can't be the first person.
Right, and understanding that behavior
doesn't mean that that's okay.
Like that, you know, and that's like the seed of misogyny
right then and there, like in a very patent obvious way.
It's almost like those two groups shouldn't be like
in the same classroom being educated
in the same place at the same time.
It raises that question to be sure.
But if we're not gonna go, if that's not the route,
what we need to do,
and this is the suggestion I make in the book
is we gotta make sure that these sixth grade guys,
seventh grade guys, especially who might be smaller,
just not on the front edge of puberty,
have ways to feel good about themselves, right?
That we cannot just hope that they handle it well, right?
That we need to find ways to put self-esteem in place.
And another cardinal rule in psychology
is self-esteem does not come from people telling you
that you're good.
It comes from doing things that you feel good about.
And so there are things we can provide
to middle school boys that, you know,
where they can have meaning and they can have mastery
that I would like to think might keep them
from taking a wrong turn as they're trying to find ways
to keep their self-esteem intact.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, and just more broadly, that idea of a parent,
like telling their kid, like they're okay,
or they're doing good, again, a well-intentioned thing,
but not as effective as making sure that their kid
is being put in positions that are challenging,
not too challenging where they have to toil
and struggle a little bit and learn,
get to the other side of it.
That's what builds true self-esteem,
not the affirmations of the parents
who wanna put a medal around every kid's neck
and tell them that they're the most special thing
in the world.
Yeah, yeah, no, I agree completely.
And I, again, back to kids bullshit detectors.
I mean, I think in some ways it can feel like an insult
if the kid knows they did nothing
and people are celebrating.
The final thing I wanna explore with you
before I let you go is this very interesting era
that we find ourselves in around gender,
as you call it expansiveness, right?
Like it does seem, you know, like I'm an old fuddy-duddy
that we're in a period of time in which gender fluidity
is,
something that is suddenly, if not ubiquitous,
is certainly a mainstream thing.
And more and more young people are identifying
in new and unique ways.
And there's a culture war raging around all of this.
And I think it's disorienting for parents
to try to understand it,
perhaps more disorienting for young people.
But it's certainly a fascinating phenomenon
that is unprecedented, at least in our lifetimes.
Like I haven't seen this.
And so I'm curious about,
like is this something that's always been there,
but just there hasn't been a culture permissive enough
to allow people to be comfortable
expressing themselves in this way?
Is this something different?
Is what's driving this?
Help me make sense of what's going on.
I don't know that I have answers.
I mean, those are big questions that I think it's also new.
It's all happened so fast.
I think we're trying new. It's all happened so fast.
I think we're trying to make sense of it.
I could tell you what I would watch out for though,
which is a single explanation
or anyone who wants to make it simple, right?
I think there's probably a lot of forces at work
that are changing this landscape.
And it is, you are right.
I mean, there's an incredible polarization around it.
There's a lot of very, very vehement disagreement
about how it should be addressed,
how individual families should address it,
what laws and policies should be around it.
As I watch the controversies around it unfold
with people having very strong opinions
about whether we should,
how we should respond
when a young person expresses
that the gender they were assigned at birth
doesn't feel like the one that's right for them.
What I always fall back on
is how we think as clinicians,
which is there's nowhere in the care of young people
when a young person comes up against a difficulty
in the world or not fitting in in the world
in a particular way that they've been assigned,
there's nowhere that we feel that there's a single solution
that is gonna be right for every kid.
So whether we're talking diagnostic stuff,
like even something as comparatively simple as ADHD, right?
And not that gender expansiveness is a disorder,
but just thinking in terms of like
when clinicians are called in
to try to help somebody through something,
you should go run screaming from the hills.
Any clinician who's like, there's one way we do this,
we do this every way for every single kid.
So what I think as a clinician is, for every kid and family going through this,
they deserve what we would give every kid, what we should give every kid for any concern that
arises, which is a very careful consideration of the specific circumstances of that child,
that family, the forces around them, the resources available to them psychologically and otherwise should be married with clinical experience,
clinical understanding to try to figure out
what the path is most likely to be,
most useful path for that particular young person.
And so, as I hear these controversies unfold,
I feel like anyone who tells you
there's one way this should go down, I wouldn't trust that
about gender expansiveness or anything about a kid.
And then that's how I try to think about it clinically.
Yeah, I mean, there's, you know,
policy disagreements about gender affirming care
and there's legislation around, you know,
this sort of thing.
And then there's the whole debate
around trans participation in sports and all of that.
That's one thing.
But then there's just the case of the kid
who raises his or her or their hand one day and says,
"'Hey, I wanna be this and I wanna be called this."
And the parent trying to understand that,
every parent wants their child to be happy.
Hopefully that child will be received with compassion
and empathy and a real, true, honest desire to understand.
And in the appropriate case,
therapeutic protocols can get introduced,
someone like yourself.
But I still think even with all of that, like from,
and I'm asking you from the perspective of a parent,
like how does the parent, you know,
really, you know, show up for a kid like that
with the kind of competing concerns of like compassion,
understanding, love, et cetera,
you want the best for your child.
And like, what is the responsible choice here?
Particularly in the case of a child who's pushing
for medical intervention, et cetera, you know,
like then it becomes like very real very quickly.
And because I think there are a lot of people
who are kind of contending with this right now,
there's a lot of, you know, confusion about like how to,
how to really, you to really walk this path.
Yeah.
So there's a simple answer that is true,
which is we do have data showing
that for parents to take an affirming stance
will be the thing that most protects
that child's mental health.
So what you're talking about being compassionate
and attentive, that the data bear out,
like in terms of protecting the mental health
of that young person,
that is the response that parents can bring
that will make the biggest difference.
Then the question of affirming, right,
can then start to go into very complex territory
about what that means.
And especially when we're talking medical interventions.
And what I wish every parent had access to,
but they don't,
is we have university-based clinics
where there are experts who have seen,
this may be your first gender expansive kid,
they've seen hundreds of gender expansive kids.
And the value of a good clinician
is that they have a lot of information to work with
in terms of making recommendations.
And they can see your child against a backdrop of a lot of information to work with in terms of making recommendations. And they can see your child against a backdrop
of a lot of kids and a lot of outcomes
and trajectories over time and offer some wisdom to parents
about how this may likely unfold or what the options are
or what the complexities are.
So what I would say is in the immediate,
if we go by the data
and we go by what protects kids' mental health,
parents wanna be supportive.
In the difficult details of what that looks like,
I would never want parents to feel alone
or that they have to figure this out from scratch
or that they would have to figure this out
without the wisdom of people who spend a lot of time
thinking about this and have worked with a lot of time thinking about this
and have worked with a lot of families
through similar situations.
Are there resources or websites for parents
who find themselves in that situation that are helpful?
I think there are, I've got some resources
that I mentioned in the back of the book
around texts that are done.
I myself am a big fan of university-based clinics.
The nice thing about universities is that they tend
to be very, very up to date on research.
They tend to bring a very decent balance
to their consideration of anything.
So, I would say that for a lot of things,
you wanna be where they are training people.
And so as a function of training people,
they are staying very much on top of what's going on.
So what I would say is for a parent in this position,
if they can access a university-based resource center,
that will usually be the most reliable
and the most current body of wisdom.
Yeah, that's helpful, thanks.
As we round this out, I guess the final question
that I would have for you,
with all of the kids that you treat
and the many years that you've been in this
and all the school, you go and you speak all the time
at these schools, you're interfacing with parents
and young people, what do you think are
the low hanging fruit
of like parental mistakes?
Like the things you just see all the time
and you're like, haven't we gone through this?
Like, come on, like what, you know,
it's like the one thing that you wish parents,
like if they were to take away one thing
from this conversation, like stop doing that
or maybe do a little more of this.
I'm so glad you're asking.
Here's what I would say.
When kids come our way to tell us they are upset,
which they often do,
teenagers, especially talkers are good at this.
Overwhelmingly, all they want and all they need
is for us to listen and be empathic in response,
for us to really tune in.
The way I try to do this as a parent is
if one of my daughters is telling me
she's upset about something,
I'll picture she's a reporter and I'm her editor
and she's reading me the article of her distress
and that when she gets to the end of the article,
I just have to produce the headline.
Like I have to have listened so intently
that I can distill it and summarize it
and add nothing and give it back to her.
So really all they want is that level of listening.
And then truly, Rich,
like the number one thing I say in my home
more than anything is like,
oh man, that stinks, right?
Just sitting and empathizing in response.
That is overwhelmingly what teenagers are looking for.
And so often, and I do this too,
what they get instead is advice.
Like they tell us what's wrong
and we're like, well, you know.
And one of my younger daughter said to me, she said,
mom, I can tell from the look on your face
when I'm talking to you, when you stop listening,
you've come up with the thing you're gonna say to me
by way of advice and you're now just waiting for me to pause.
Right, right.
You're just like, okay, let me just wait until this is over
and then I'm gonna throw the zinger.
Drop some wisdom on you.
So what I would say is,
it's very rarely what they're looking for
or what they want or need.
And it usually actually ruins a moment
that could be going quite a bit better.
So curiosity plus empathy or just empathy
is I would say overwhelmingly the most effective
and also wanted response
when teenagers come our way with their distress.
Beautiful.
I love it.
You are a gift.
I think the work you're doing is so important
and I really appreciate you coming here today
to share your wisdom and experience.
You are the teen whisperer.
Such an honor.
Such an honor to be here and with you.
Thank you.
Everybody pick up the emotional lives of teenagers.
Also, Lisa has a podcast, Ask Lisa.
Yep, The Psychology of Parenting.
And what's great about that is that it's subject specific.
So if you're a parent and you're like,
God damn it, my kid did this one thing
or like this thing happened,
I just don't know how to deal with it.
You can scroll through her catalog and chances are,
like it's a question that's come up
that she's talked through.
And I have relied upon this resource successfully.
So check that out.
And anything else you wanna point people to?
I have a website, drlisademore.com.
And what I've tried to do is design it
so that people can really find the resources
they're looking for.
I have it in six sections.
And for every section, there are articles,
podcasts, TV work I've done.
I want parents to feel like that website
is actually like a catalog of utility for them.
Yeah, that's great.
And you were here in like,
you spoke at a school earlier today,
you came here and now you have to go back
to that same school to like talk again.
Like this is what you do.
This is what I do.
And I am so, so fortunate that this is what I get to do.
Well, you're always welcome here.
And thank you again and best of luck.
And if I can be of service to you and your mission,
please let me know.
It's really great work. I so appreciate that.
Thank you. Cheers.
Same. Peace.
Thanks.
That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
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Peace.
Plants.
Namaste. Thank you.