Anxiety symptoms vary widely from moodiness to lashing out.
Carol Yepes | Moment | Getty Images
Slamming doors, throwing tantrums, unexpected crying, and one-sided conversations at the dinner table. If these are common occurrences in your household, you are probably raising a teenager.
Teenagers are often perceived as entitled brats with little or no control over their emotions. And although many parents may see this as unnecessary angst or rebellion, these could be signs of the child struggling with anxiety.
“It’s so overwhelming and so powerful that you’re really just stuck in the storm. The anxiety has taken control over your mind and body,” said Natasha Riard, lecturer in clinical psychology and psychology clinic manager at James Cook University Singapore.
“The person who is experiencing anxiety wants it to stop, and the parent watching it wants to stop it. But once the panic attack starts, it’s like a train that has left the station, and it’s only going to stop when it reaches the next one. The journey between those stations is the experience of the attack,” Riard explained.
Parents might not always know how to help their children when they are feeling anxious or are on the brink of an anxiety attack, and methods that worked in the past may no longer be useful as teenagers face new challenges, psychologists said.
Here’s how parents can better perceive signs of anxiety among their kids — and tips for them to help their young ones.
The signs
Psychologists said they also noticed children having a fawn reaction where they suffer from “high-functioning” anxiety and manage to carry on with their daily routine despite being in poor mental health.
“Young people often avoid how they’re feeling and do their best to appear that everything is okay by appearing busy in a chaotic situation. What you see on their face or behavior may not be what’s going on underneath,” Lisa Coloca, psychologist and director at Melbourne-based Bloom Psychology Group and Bloom Community highlighted.
Yale’s Lebowitz said that some of the signs parents should watch out for are shortness of breath, body stiffness and a change in skin tone. Although an anxiety attack may seem scary and uncontrollable, it’s not dangerous and parents should not “freak out,” he added.
Top tips to help an anxious teen
When children approach parents with their worries, reassurance is not always the solution.
When a child or teenager is feeling anxious, it often helps to know that they are not alone.
Want to make extra money outside of your day job? Sign up for CNBC’s new online course How to Earn Passive Income Online to learn about common passive income streams, tips to get started and real-life success stories. Register today and save 50% with discount code EARLYBIRD.