Understanding Your Teenager’s Brain

Understanding Your Teenager's Brain

The teenage brain is a mysterious place that has confused adults for generations. Teens tend to behave impulsively and often engage in activities that adults don’t understand.

Why do teens behave so impetuously and make illogical decisions?

Fortunately, numerous studies in teenage brain development have shed some light on the subject. As a parent, understanding your troubled teen’s brain and thought processes can help you foster a better relationship.

Understanding the teenage brain

Brain growth and development

Our brains go through significant changes as we grow up. When we are babies and toddlers, our brains grow at a rapid pace. New neural pathways are created, and the brain grows larger.

By age 6, our brains are nearly as big as they will get, but they are not fully developed. There’s still a lot of growth before full brain maturity.

The brain doesn’t reach its full size until the tween or early teen years, and it tends to happen a little faster for girls than for boys. However, brain size does not automatically equate to behavioral maturity. Just because the brain is as big as it’s going to get doesn’t mean it’s done forming.

Full brain formation

Throughout the teen and early adult years, the brain continues to develop. The human brain fully forms from back to front. So the back part of the brain is completed first, then the middle, then the front (the frontal lobe). Our frontal lobes do not fully develop until we are in our early to mid-twenties.

The lobes of the brain and their basic functions are:

  • Occipital Lobe: Visual understanding — making sense of what you see
  • Temporal Lobe: Memory & Hearing/Speech — memory and making sense of what you hear
  • Parietal Lobe: Touch, Taste, Smell, & Scholastic learning — spatial perceptions, interpreting what you touch/taste/smell, mathematics, reading, and writing
  • Frontal Lobe: Thinking, Planning, & Judgment — making decisions, judgment calls, emotions, and your personality

Why do teenagers behave illogically?

Since their frontal lobe is the last to develop, teenagers tend to behave illogically and act impetuously. Their ability to have sound judgment and rationalize their actions is not fully formed yet. Though they might realize that behavior comes with a certain level of risk, they either downplay the risk or feel like the reward is worth it.

Not only that, but the teen years come with an influx of hormones that can change their moods in the drop of a hat. With the added hormones, mood swings, and general uncertainty that accompanies the teen years, it’s really common for teenagers to behave irrationally.

Helping your troubled teen make better decisions

Though you can’t speed up their brain development, there are a few things you can do to help your troubled teen learn to make better decisions.

  • Have regular conversations with your troubled teen about choices and consequences. Help your teen understand that their actions are their choice, and their choices have consequences. If they choose to participate in dangerous activities, they could end up with serious negative consequences.
  • Encourage positive behavior. If you know that your troubled teen is reckless and might make hasty decisions, encourage them to develop positive hobbies that won’t likely result in negative consequences.
  • Help your troubled teen learn to problem-solve. Many teens have no clue how to fix their problems in life, so they do whatever comes to mind first. By learning how to slow down and problem-solve, your teen will be more likely to make better choices in the future.

If your troubled teen’s behavior is getting them into trouble, you may need to find outside help. Some teens have a hard time thinking through the consequences of their actions and making purposeful decisions. Others know that what they’re doing could have negative consequences, but they do it anyway. In either case, teens must learn to assess potential impacts and make good choices.

If you need help finding the best treatment option for your troubled teen, contact us at Help Your Teen Now. We can help you navigate the teen help industry’s options to find the best treatment plan for your family.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

24 Feb, 2021

Recent Posts

Sending Your Son to a Therapeutic Boarding School Isn’t Failing

As parents, we like to think that we can handle everything that the world throws our way. When we are faced with the reality of raising children in modern society, with all of its complexities, many of us begin to wonder about our abilities as parents. If the usual...

Tips to Select the Best Treatment Program For Your Troubled Teen

You want the best for your child, but how do you know which therapeutic boarding school will be the right fit? There are so many options out there for troubled teens, and it can be tough to sort through them all to find the right one. Factors like cost, location,...

Don’t Give Up On Your Troubled Teen

The amount of time and energy required to console a troubled teen may seem insurmountable. Every parent deals with an occasional act of rebellion, but when your teen seems to be moving from an occasional rebellious outburst toward what appears to be a rebellious way...

Be Involved: Suicide Prevention Awareness Month

For many parents, it’s a nightmare come true to learn that your child is feeling suicidal. If you are in this situation, know that you are not alone. Reach out for assistance in helping your suicidal child. You don’t have to walk through this struggle alone. If your...

Tips to Get Your Teen to Wear Their Mask

This fall, the change in seasons brings with it more than the usual back to school challenges and scents of pumpkin spice. As states and school systems struggle to open safely and establish a new sustainable normal, most young people are being asked to wear masks in...

Five Tips to Improve Your Teen’s Social Skills

In the modern age of education, it has become much more difficult for teens to acquire adequate social skills that are key for personal development. Remote classes and social isolation have made communication much more difficult, depriving teens of necessary social...

Teens Going Back To School: Seeking A New Normal

This fall, we all struggle to find the balance between the way we traditionally go about life and the much-touted “new normal.” The COVID-19 pandemic has altered daily fives in a wide range of ways. As communities and school districts struggle to establish what your...

Helping Your Teen Daughter Avoid Dating Consequences

Teens have unrealistic and idealistic views about love. They discount the importance of respect, trust, honesty, and communication in a relationship and believe their love for their dating partner is all that matters. They are not emotionally prepared for navigating...

How Movies and TV Shows May Help Teens With Attachment Disorders

Teens watching movies and binging TV shows on a streaming platform can seem like a giant waste of time in some parents' eyes. But, what if you were told that it might actually be helping your teenager, particularly if your kid struggles with an attachment disorder? A...

Parenting During Uncertain Times

No one has ever claimed that parenting is an easy task, but this year has certainly pushed that truth to the limit. Between COVID-19 quarantine, school closures, remote learning, worldwide protests against police brutality, on top of the turmoil of a presidential...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

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