
Whether adolescents are struggling with the impact of Covid-19 on their lives or more ordinary issues around friends, grades, extracurriculars or graduation and what comes after, psychologist Lisa Damour offers clear prescriptions for parents.
Parents’ primary job, she said, is to help “guard our kids against an overall sense of hopelessness.”
Easier said than done — these days, especially — but the stakes are too high not to try.
Just as she does on her podcast, Ask Lisa: The Psychology of Parenting, with her Adolescence column for “The New York Times” and in her books, “Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood. “
Also, “Under Pressure: Confronting the Epidemic of Stress and Anxiety in Girls,” Damour offers sane, science-backed perspectives on how parents can best help their teens and tweens through these tough times. (CNN)
I just came across this short article and I think it might be helpful for you to look deeper into this current dilemma of teenage HOPELESSNESS.
If not today, when?
