Helping Your Teen Find Their “Thing”

Helping Your Teen Find Their Thing

Approximately 20 percent of teens will experience depression before they reach adulthood. 30 percent of teens with depression will also develop a substance abuse problem, and more teens and young adults die from suicide than from cancer, heart disease, AIDS, birth defects, stroke, pneumonia, influenza, and chronic lung disease, combined. A common denominator in the emptiness that teens feel in their lives is a huge lack of passion. Nothing excites them, nothing is meaningful to them, so why live? It is very important to help your teen find their “thing.” They need to have a passion to get them through the rough years ahead. Here are a few ways you can help your teen find it.

Help Them Experience The World

Your teen will continue to have a limited perspective unless they experience the world around them in new ways. You do not need fancy trips or a large budget to do this. Help them get out of their comfort zone and do things that will expand their thinking. Have them serve at community events of their choosing, things they think are important, and do it without the motivation of looking good on an application or for set service hours. Encourage them to interact with people of different backgrounds and to read all they can about how the world works. Allowing more knowledge and information into anyone’s head will help give them a more informed idea of their passion.

Learning From Failure

We live in a world where failure is feared. Teens go to school everyday expecting to be perfect in everything they do. This can give your teen a false sense of how the world really works.For someone to pursue their passion and find it, it is necessary to fail! By teaching your teen the importance and relevance of learning by failure, they can understand that it often takes many tries before they achieve what they want. By failing over and over again, eventually, their passions will show through. What they continue to work on even after failure is the most important.

Intrinsic Motivation

The world is so competitive these days. From almost day one at school, kids are taught to compete and do whatever will help maintain their reputation. This is a huge problem when your teen is trying to find their passion! They might find one area interesting, but since it is not cool and does not look as good in the long run, they will overlook it. Help teach your teen that what they want to do is way more important than the way others treat you. Some of our best leaders in the world are motivated intrinsically, they do what they want to do! If teens could have the same mentality these days, finding passion would be so much easier!

It is so important to just be there for your teen throughout the whole process, help them realize that the school world they live in everyday is almost nothing like the real world. Encourage them to expand their mind so they can find more job and passion.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

25 Jun, 2017

Recent Posts

Finding Help For Teen Son With ADHD

All families are different, and the signs and symptoms of ADHD (Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) can show up differently. Sometimes, a child can show the classic symptoms of ADHD from a very young age and receive treatment almost immediately. Other times, the...

Improve Your Relationship With Your Teen Son

If you want to improve your relationship with your teen son, there are a few different strategies that you can use. In this article, we’re going to focus on specific ideas for one-on-one date nights that you can do with your teen. Creating personal time away from...

Finding the Right Boys Home For Your Teen Son

Finding the right solution for your teen son who may be in crisis is essential to ensure his future is steady, stable, and on the right track. Teen boys struggling with mental health or behavioral issues often need therapeutic intervention. The right boy's home can...

Improve Teen Grades in 6 Easy Ways

Parents usually think teens are just being lazy when they have bad grades. And for some kids, that could be true. But many teens aren't lazy; they just need to learn how to study or organize properly to be successful in school. Others teens have ADHD and other mental...

Defiant Teenager Help and Resources

When your little one was born, there are good odds you were warned about the terrible twos and threes being the most problematic years to deal with. In truth, the pre-teen and teen years can bring with them the most challenges for parents. Your teen may be slipping at...

How CBT is Improving Teen Therapy

A practical therapeutic approach, cognitive behavioral therapy, examines how the environment and preconceptions influence our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) aims to teach people how to identify irrational thought processes that...

What Happens When You Kick Out Your Teenager

As much as you love your teenager, there may come a day when you look at your options for having them leave your home to protect yourself and the other family members better. You may have tried just about everything you can think of to try and get your troubled teen...

Winter Activities to do with your Teen

Winter can be a challenging time to find fun and engaging activities to do with your teen. Sure, it’s easy to leave them with an iPad and a movie, but unless you want them mindlessly scrolling all day, there needs to be a bit more structure to your cold-weather...

What is a Disciplinary School?

What do you think of when you think of a disciplinary school? You may picture harsh methods of discipline, rigid rules, and children who are afraid to break those strict rules. While this may have been the case in the past, today, a disciplinary school typically takes...

Why Is My Teenager so Lazy?

We’ve all seen our kids in action, or rather inaction and it drives us nuts. The slothful behavior, disregard for order, or promptness. Yes, we’re talking about the big L, laziness. Laziness has to be one of the most common complaints parents have with their...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *