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Finals! (and Other Teenage Troubles)

Cheryl's Musings: Finals! (and Other Teenage Troubles)

Cheryl's Musings

How to Thrive on the Writer's Road

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Finals! (and Other Teenage Troubles)

bookwormFINALS. They have descended on our kids—and, therefore, on the entire household, a week of exams preceded by what seems like two months of building stress, final projects, deadlines, and kids with too little sleep. It brings back memories of my own high school career—the intense emotions of being a teenager coupled with the stress that comes with knowing that what I did mattered, like, for the rest of my life. Teens are in that awkward middle place where they want to be in charge of their own lives—and yet, at the same time, they don’t. Being in charge is scary. Being grown-up is scary. The stakes are starting to get higher.

I often wonder if today’s teens face a more difficult transition than I did. In today’s world, you don’t just take your SATs; you have to take a class first in order to be competitive. You don’t just deal with friends and classmates (and bullies) face-to-face; you also deal with them online, on Facebook, MySpace, blogs, and email. You don’t participate in activities and sports solely for enjoyment; you pack your schedule to overflowing to round out your college apps. grads

But beneath all the surface specifics, I also wonder if the difference between being a teen today and being one ten, twenty, thirty years ago is smaller than it appears—because even if the world has changed, people haven’t.

Here’s what I mean: have you ever been super stressed out? Way too many appointments, meetings, and after-school activities to juggle, maybe, or a rush of work deadlines just before a big trip coupled with sick kids, or…fill in the blanks with your own overload experiences? During the stress experience, the cause (whatever it is) can seem huge and overwhelming.

But fast forward to another memory, one that goes beyond ordinary stress—a death in the family, a friend in the hospital, a cross-country move, a wedding. I don’t know about you, but in my experience, when life hits me with the Big Stuff, all the day-to-day stressors fade into the background. The house is a disaster, the lawn needs to be mowed, the refrigerator is empty, the bills unpaid—and those don’t even register on my stress-o-meter, because they really aren’t that important in the big picture of life. When the Big Stuff resolves, I always get a few happy weeks when I remember that all the stressful details of life aren’t actually nearly as big a deal as I usually make of them.

That’s why I wonder if being a teen today is, ultimately, very much like it was twenty years ago, or even a hundred years ago. The things we stress about change; the stress experience does not. The experiences of uncertainty, fear, confusion, first love, bullying, dealing with parents, and figuring out who you are—those stay the same. And that’s why I write for them—to explore those experiences and, hopefully, help them to make sense.

What do you think: is being a teen today more difficult than when you were a kid? Is the pressure more intense, or just different?

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5 Comments:

At May 25, 2011 at 8:44 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree that the form has changed - particularly as pressure to perform has increased and social media has changed the landscape of a teen's social life. But the presence of stress has not changed. I respect people who can write to this population in a way that builds them up.

 
At May 25, 2011 at 9:09 AM , Blogger A Beer for the Shower said...

Agreed, social media has changed the way the world works, both for better and worse. I'm thankful I graduated high school a decade ago, before it hit full swing. The world is shrinking, in terms of communication ability, and I can't say I envy any modern teens for the additional available outlets. And yet, here I am a decade later and still taking finals...

 
At May 25, 2011 at 11:28 AM , Blogger Cheryl Reif said...

Rebecca: I like the way you put it--that social media changes the landscape of a teen's social life. Stress remains the same, but the backdrop changes.

Brian: still taking finals...but I bet you don't freak out quite as much! Or maybe you weren't ever the freaking-out-at-finals type... Good luck on current exams!

 
At May 25, 2011 at 7:00 PM , Blogger Unknown said...

I really don't think it ever really changes. No matter how much our technology or rules change, the same factors will always exist. The cool kids, the have's and have not's, the trouble-makers and the geeks. Technology has just made it more apparent to us.

 
At May 26, 2011 at 11:52 AM , Blogger Julia Munroe Martin said...

Absolutely no question in my mind, teen stress is increasing -- I've seen it in my own kids. And I read recently that at least 55% of college freshmen are suffering from anxiety or depression! (There's a new movie about it called "Race to Nowhere.") Kids feel the weight of the world on their shoulders to "be something," and that they need to "do well" on everything, constantly competing on everything. Although (from my point of view) this is made worse by social media, that's certainly not the whole reason... I believe there really is an epidemic of stress...

 

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