Practices to Review 3 Months After Your Teen Exits a Therapeutic Boarding School

Practices to Review 3 Months After Your Teen Exists a Therapeutic Boarding School

Therapeutic boarding schools can be an option for teens who are struggling with a serious disorder like ADHD, anxiety, depression, oppositional defiant disorder, eating disorders, etc. During your teen’s time at one of these schools, he will likely have participated in practices that helped him cope and make changes for the better. Here are practices you can review at home after your teen has readjusted to life outside their boarding school.

Wilderness Therapy

Many therapeutic boarding schools offer nature or wilderness therapy as part of their treatment program. This helps get teens outside and experiencing the world around them as opposed to doing all their growing and changing within the walls of the facility. You can help your teen make their transition back into their day-to-day life by continuing this practice.

Many families take camping trips together, or you can merely take a day hike with your teen. This type of activity will remind them of what they learned in their boarding school and allow them to continue using these practices while at home.

Mindfulness

Another common practice of therapeutic boarding schools is to teach mindfulness or the practice of being aware and present in the moment. This can be a very difficult practice, especially for a teen who suffers from ADHD or oppositional defiance disorder, but that is exactly why mindfulness is used so often in these programs.

Mindfulness helps those who have trouble letting go of their worries and anxieties find an inner calmness and focus on the moment. Thoughts may come and go during this time, but those practicing mindfulness are urged to acknowledge them, accept them, and then move on. This practice is something you can do at home with your teen, either by meditating or doing an exercise like yoga.

Emotional Regulations

Your teen will have learned how to better regulate their emotions while at their therapeutic boarding school, and reviewing this practice can be helpful after their program ends. Emotional regulation is all about managing, changing, and manipulating one’s own emotions rather than getting caught up in them or only focusing on the emotions of others. You can gently remind your teen of this practice when they start to become upset or emotional and ask them what coping skills they have learned. You can even use these skills together to make sure you both are able to control your emotions.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

13 Jun, 2017

Recent Posts

Study Find That Teenage Opioid Use is Linked to Parental Use

Study Find That Teenage Opioid Use is Linked to Parental Use

There are a wide variety of reasons why parents may find themselves in possession of opioids—from injury recovery to part of a medical pain management regime. However, most parents never want to find out that their teenagers have snuck some of their prescription...

Teens Need to Know #TheRealCost of Vaping

Teens Need to Know #TheRealCost of Vaping

For many parents, the marketing of e-cigarettes and other vaping products is likely eerily familiar, and it should be. E-cigarettes are following the same tactics as big tobacco companies. Unfortunately, the constant insistence of “just water vapor” and “no smell,...

You Can’t Treat the Individual Without Treating the Family

You Can’t Treat the Individual Without Treating the Family

When there is a troubled teen in the home, the impact is felt throughout the entire family. Parents struggle to find something that works to help their struggling teenager, while siblings can feel neglected, or worse, are terrorized by their troubled sibling. Since it...

You May Also Like…

Parenting Tips for 14 year olds

Parenting Tips for 14 year olds

Teens can be hard to talk to sometimes and even to engage with. Many kids are dealing with changes during the early...

How to Set a Curfew For Your Teen

How to Set a Curfew For Your Teen

When your teen was younger, it wasn’t necessary to set a curfew for him. Most likely because you were the one who was...

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

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