How to help teenagers manage their emotions
The teenage years are an emotional rollercoaster of fantastic highs and moments when life simply seems too hard. Helping teens navigate their emotions can be a challenge. Here are 6 ways you can help.
The teenage years are an emotional rollercoaster of fantastic highs and moments when life simply seems too hard. Helping teens navigate their emotions can be a challenge. Here are 6 ways you can help.
Slammed bedroom doors. Silence. Tears and tempers. Moments of confidence and hope followed by disappointment, anger and frustration…The teenage years can run an emotional gamut and parents ride this hair-raising emotional rollercoaster with their child.
Knowing what to say and do when your teenager is struggling with life situations can be tricky.
“The years from 13 to 18 are a time of change. Every child is different but a lot of emotions are around sense of identity. Teenagers are moving towards adulthood and how they see themselves, how they want to be seen by others and what they stand for can affect how they interact with others and solve challenges,” says Graham Leys, Head of Senior (Boys).
“Often for boys there’s a gradual change from the reactionary responses of younger, less mature boys to developing a more measured approach to dealing with stresses. Boys become confident and comfortable in who they are but that that ride can be rocky for some and smoother for others.”
Helen Wadden, Head of Senior (Girls), says teenagers share many emotional highs and lows.
“Emotions like anger and a feeling of devastation, that the world is collapsing in on them and that there is nothing anyone can do to help are common,” she says.
“In Senior School, emotions can be tied to relationship breakdowns, either within a friendship group or with a romantic partner and those situations are difficult for young people to handle. They might feel betrayed, confused and humiliated and those emotions can be overwhelming. It’s important for parents to remember these emotions are very real for their child, no matter how insignificant they may seem to adults.”
Recognising that the teenage years can be charged with emotions, how can parents help their child through the highs and lows?
From a parent’s perspective, 'Rachel' is the mother of two boys who have navigated their teenage years and come out the other side. Here she shares her own insights -
“With boys, it’s hard to get information. They’d come home and no matter how many ways I asked a question, I’d sometimes get nothing. Or I’d get an aggressive attitude and then I knew something was happening in their world because that was uncharacteristic.
As a mother, you want to take action – you want to fix things straightaway. However, at one point, my oldest son said he wasn’t going to tell me anything anymore because I was always in ‘solution mode’.
So, we came to an agreement that when my boys wanted to tell me something that they’d either say they just wanted me to listen, or they wanted me to listen and then give advice, or they wanted me to listen and then take some action. If I was going to take action, I’d let them know what I thought I needed to do and I asked them to trust me that I knew how to manage the situation.
I think it also helped as a parent of teenagers to have good friends who were also parenting teens who could talk about what was happening in their world, and share experiences within a ‘cone of silence’, normalise what was happening, and then share ideas on how to support our children.”
Watch the video below for a recording of our recent How to help teenagers manage their emotions webinar event. Hosted by Diane Furusho Deputy Principal Student Wellbeing and a panel of experienced professionals, including Graham Leys, Head of Senior (Boys), and Helen Wadden, Head of Senior (Girls), they share their expertise and practical strategies for assisting teenagers through their emotional journey.
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