Recognizing If Your Teenager Is Suffering From Anxiety

Recognizing If Your Teenager Is Suffering From Anxiety

As your child transitions into their teenage years, you might notice that they seem a little more anxious about things. During puberty, kids start to feel more self-conscious and worried about what other people think of them.

It’s common for teens to become slightly more anxious or uncomfortable in social situations during their teenage years. However, many teens battle with excessive anxiety that can make their lives difficult.

If you think that your troubled teen is struggling with an anxiety disorder, it is imperative that you get professional help. Professional therapists utilize various techniques to help their patients overcome anxiety and learn to live happy, healthy lives.

If you are looking for guidance to help your teen overcome their anxiety, Help Your Teen Now can point you in the right direction.

Types of Teen Anxiety Disorders

Most adult anxiety disorders start during the teenage or childhood years. Though people can develop anxiety disorders as adults without ever having them as kids, it’s uncommon.

We all have anxiety of some kind as kids, but it isn’t always detrimental to our lives. People who suffer from anxiety disorders have an extreme level of anxiety that interferes with their day-to-day lives.

Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)

GAD is precisely what it sounds like: a lot of general anxiety.

Children and teens with GAD seem to worry about everything. They might appear to be on-edge a lot, overly emotional, or have trouble concentrating.

Rather than having one certain thing that worries them, they seem to be worried about everything.

Phobias

People who have a phobia have an irrational fear of a particular thing.

They likely know that the fear is irrational, but it doesn’t make them any less scared. Some common phobias include fear of spiders, snakes, heights, and needles. Some phobias interfere with day-to-day life more than others.

For example, someone with arachnophobia (fear of spiders) might be OK most of the time since they don’t encounter spiders very often. However, someone with Agoraphobia (fear of open places) might be reluctant to go out in public or even leave their house.

Social Anxiety

Troubled teens who have social anxiety have a really tough time in social situations.

Social anxiety can make school and extracurricular activities almost unbearable. As they move into adulthood, life can become even more complicated when they are uncomfortable going on dates or going on job interviews.

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

People who have OCD have anxiety around a particular object or activity and tend to obsess over it. That obsession then leads to a compulsion to control the anxiety, usually by an irrational means.

Because the compulsion is irrational, it can become detrimental. For example, someone who has an extreme fear of germs might obsess over it and feel compelled to scrub their hands excessively, even if the scrubbing hurts their hands.

Panic Attacks

Panic attacks are a physical reaction to anxiety that can result in a rapid heart rate, breathing problems, dizziness, chills, and numerous other physical symptoms.

The symptoms of a panic attack often resemble the symptoms of a heart attack or other heart complication. Panic attacks can be especially scary, both for the troubled teen experiencing them and their parents, since the trigger for the attacks is often unknown.

What to do if your teenager is suffering from anxiety

If your teenager is suffering from anxiety, there are a few things you can do to help.

  • Talk to them about it. Make sure that you listen nonjudgmentally to understand how they’re feeling. Remember, the feelings of extreme fear produced by an anxiety disorder are irrational, and your teen probably knows that it’s irrational. Make sure that you aren’t talking down to them for feeling the way they do.
  • Encourage positive routines. Help your troubled teen eliminate unhealthy patterns and build positive routines. Sleeping well, eating well, and exercising can all help reinforce positive mental health.
  • Get help. Teens struggling with anxiety disorders often need more than just a healthy lifestyle. Though a healthy lifestyle will support their mental health, more significant intervention is necessary.

If you have already tried therapy for your troubled teen, but it isn’t working the way you hoped, you may need to change strategies. While outpatient therapy is great for some kids, others need a more holistic approach.

Contact us today for more information and resources that will help you find the information you need.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

26 Feb, 2021

Recent Posts

What Are The Best Programs for Troubled Teens?

If you have a troubled teen or a teen otherwise in crisis, it may have been suggested that you consider a therapeutic boarding school or a residential treatment center. While you know your teen needs more help and better therapeutic options, you may hesitate to...

Is My Teenager Gaslighting?

Does it sometimes feel like your teenager is making you doubt yourself, doubt the things you’ve said, and even feel confused about what you have or haven’t said? If you’re confused just by trying to figure it out, there are good odds that your teenager is gaslighting...

10 Fall Activities To Do With Your Teen

The holidays will be here before we know it - and now is the perfect time to reconnect with your teen before the hustle and bustle of the winter season arrives. Not only can you show your teen that you’re available to them for time outside of work and school, but you...

Help! My Teen is Sexually Active.

It’s the conversation many of us have been dreading for years: Talking to your sexually active teens about what they are doing, how they need to be safe, and how to recognize red flags in their sexually active life. As much as we’d like to simply bury our heads and...

Conflict Resolution for Teens

Conflict can be stressful no matter how old you are. Unfortunately, conflict is just part of life. Teens can feel conflict to be very personal and even scary, leading to behaviors that are not optimal for dealing with this stress. Teens also are more likely to be...

How Do I Control My Anger as A Teenager?

Your teen years are filled with rollercoasters of emotions, confusion, frustration, and so much more. Parents may say that the teen years are challenging for them, but it could just be that they’ve forgotten just how it feels to be a teen. And indeed, parents today...

Troubled Teen Stressing My Family Life

Is your teen acting out, getting into trouble, making poor decisions, and causing stress for everyone in the family? When the actions and behaviors of just one person in the family start to become the focal point for everyone, it can lead to a rapid rise in stress for...

My Teen is a Liar!

If you’re raising a teen, there might have been times that you caught your teen lying to you. All kids can be caught lying from time to time. But what do you do if you are dealing with a kid who lies all the time? It can feel frustrating and cause parents great worry...

Is Self Harming Always a Concern?

How much do you know about self-harm? If you have a personal history of self-harming, then it’s likely that you look for signs of it in your teen. If your knowledge of it is exclusively limited to what you’ve seen on the big screen or in the media, you may have a few...

Great Ways to Help Your Teen Save Money

Did your parents teach you about saving money when you were younger? Like most of us, you had to learn some valuable financial lessons the very difficult. Fortunately for your teen, he can benefit from your hard-earned lessons and know how he can save money for big...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

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