Bethesda Therapy for Adults, Children & Parents | Your Best Self Therapy

Teens Share Why They Don’t Talk: We Share What To Do About It

It’s no secret that teenagers are not always forthcoming with information. It’s nothing to take personally. In fact, it’s developmentally appropriate in most cases. However, teens are often reporting things in the therapy room that they wish their parents knew, yet they hesitate to share with them.

While we he work with teens daily, we didn’t want to make assumptions of why this is. Instead, we headed to Instagram. We used the social media platform asked teens to write to us about why they don’t talk to or share things with their parents. Below are the top three reasons voiced by teens and our advice to parents to combat them.

1. I don’t want to “burden” them, or make them “more stressed” or “worried.”

Your teen has way more empathy and care for you than you would know based on their constant eye-rolls and annoyance of your existence. They are also aware of the immense love you have for them, and know that if they are hurting, so are you. The teens that share this as a reason for omitting information to their parents, are usually the sensitive and perceptive type. They are also often the perfectionist that irrationally believes they should be able to handle anything and everything all by themselves.

What Parents Can DoBrittany LaFleur, Your Best Self Therapy

    Try:

    Avoid:

2. They may not understand and shut you down.

“You don’t understand.” This is the age-old phrase recited by teens to their parents. The truth is, parents often really don’t understand, and that’s okay. Parents don’t need to understand to be able to listen and support, which is what they are really asking of you.

What Parents Can Do

   Try:

    Avoid:

3. I don’t want to get in trouble.

No one enjoys facing negative consequences. Not a two-year-old.. not an eighty-year-old. Nonetheless, the teenage years are filled with risk taking where negative consequences often ensue. So, how do you convince them they should reveal something they may get in trouble for?

What Parents Can Do

Try:

Avoid:

Vulnerability is not easy, and can be even more difficult for a teen navigating building independence and identify. If you suspect something is going on and your teen isn’t talking, it may be a good time to find a therapist your child can connect to. The therapist can help make sure the teen is safe, as well as improve communication patterns between the two of you. 

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