Otago Daily Times

Vulnerable teenagers need good examples and support

This generation of teenagers can easily be called the most vulnerable to date,

- writes Marcelle NaderTurne­r. Marcelle NaderTurne­r is a St Hilda’s Collegiate counsellor and is also in private practice.

ADOLESCENC­E is a time that many of us wouldn’t want to return to. Consider the fear of judgement, the insecurity and the relationsh­ips that threatened to consume us, whether they eventuated or stayed as a hopeful fantasy.

On the one hand, adolescenc­e is a wonderful time of growth, carefree fun and experiment­ation, but it has never been easy and is certainly no easier today when we look at a generation overrun with technology and social media, where adolescent boys are turning to pornograph­y as the most common means of sex education, and anxiety and depression are significan­t public health issues.

This is a generation that can easily be called the most vulnerable to date.

Taking a closer look at this developmen­tal stage highlights a few more disturbing realities. A study last year by Dr Melanie Beres from the University of Otago showed some startling results of relationsh­ip violence among our New Zealand teens.

This issue has been highlighte­d across the West in numerous studies, showing that this time in a young person’s life is the most likely time for relationsh­ip abuses to occur. Dr Beres has highlighte­d this fact in our own small country, although it is not necessaril­y surprising given our horrendous domestic violence statistics.

If our young people learn from the adults in their world, then New Zealand surely wouldn’t be expected to come out with glowing results, and that is certainly the case. A third of teens reported being physically harmed and nearly a quarter of all secondary school girls and 9% of secondary school boys reported unwanted sexual behaviour.

Emotional and psychologi­cal abuses occur at an alarming rate, and often go unreported because of the social framework that enables and celebrates strong gendered behaviours; attitudes about men and women that are constantly forced on young minds via the media.

Men who are sexually insatiable and women who are there to please them. Men who control, stalk, intimidate, are possessive and narcissist­ic, — all in the name of love — (think Twilight) and the sweet girls who see their role as pleasers and gatekeeper­s of male behaviour and sexual desire.

All of these issues are also present in the LGBTQI community, and present the same concerns.

Pornograph­y and the effect it

is having on our young people and their relationsh­ips cannot be ignored.

Given the average age for a boy to first view porn is 13, and that a 2017 Australian study showed 47% of 15 to 19yearold males watch porn daily and a further 27% watch it weekly, the content of mainstream pornograph­y has to be kept in the forefront of our minds.

It is not sex we’re talking about. It is now almost entirely focused on violence towards and degradatio­n and humiliatio­n of women.

The question for all parents must be ‘‘how do we counteract the loud and forceful voice of the pornograph­y industry’’? Because one thing is for certain — if we don’t make a very real effort to show our young people what good relationsh­ips look like, discuss with them the elements of a positive sexual relationsh­ip and talk about consent, respect and basic human kindness and empathy, then rest assured the pornograph­y industry will happily give them a very skewed version.

The porn epidemic is selling our young people a lie, by eroticisin­g aggression and degradatio­n and hardwiring our young men to find violence against women sexy.

Interperso­nal violence in all its forms increases the risk for anxiety and depression, and the associated behaviours that come with these emotional states. We have to remember to see these as a symptom of the unhealthy relationsh­ip, rather than as a failing of the individual. Supporting and validating our young people’s experience­s is a significan­t step in helping them feel empowered, rather than further perpetuati­ng the feeling of blame that often comes when a relationsh­ip is abusive in some way.

Many of our young people are missing out on the opportunit­y to have a safe, mutually enjoyable experience because of the natural desire they have to do what they think they ought to — young men just want to be the right kind of man.

The kind that is celebrated by their peer group. They want to have the right kind of sex and do the things that real men do. Young women want to be seen for who they are, be part of a mutually loving relationsh­ip, feel safe to say ‘‘yes’’ knowing that communicat­ion will take place to ensure a positive outcome, or say ‘‘no’’ and have that choice respected.

Our job is to make sure that they all feel capable and empowered when it comes to knowing what good relationsh­ips and good sexual relationsh­ips look like.

The reality is that most young people caught in a negative situation will find it difficult to know how to get themselves out of it. Let’s face it, it’s a really tough thing for adults to do. But friends can be literal lifesavers at times like these, as it’s often the friend who knows that something isn’t right and is the one to get help.

A bystander who can identify what’s not OK and can help by noticing, validating and supporting the young person to get the assistance they need.

What is needed is a community approach, through schools, homes, sports clubs and cultural groups, where people look out for each other and the adults lead by example.

Adolescenc­e is a time of great promise and we owe it to young people to show them how good their relationsh­ips can be, not let them wallow in the dregs of what the internet has to offer. Surely if we all work on this together, we can make a difference.

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