Chattanooga Times Free Press

ANXIETY IN THE AGE OF BARBIE

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It was “the summer of girl power,” a tour de force by a glittering troika. With pink dream houses, songs and sequins, Barbie, Taylor Swift and Beyoncé buoyed the economy and sent women’s confidence soaring.

So I felt sad, talking to friends dropping daughters off at college, to hear of rampant anxiety, campuses awash in SSRIs — serotonin boosters found in drugs like Prozac and Lexapro — and long waits for therapy.

It is a major topic among moms: daughters struggling with anxiety or the effects of anti-anxiety medication­s, which can include weight gain and loss of libido. Many young college women are ping-ponging between anxiety, without pills, and numbness and body insecurity, with them.

These young women seem to have everything, yet they are unable to fully enjoy a stretch in their life that should be sizzling with adventure and promise.

“Back-to-school was always a time of excitement about where the future was headed — new notebooks, fresh supplies,” mused a friend, the mother of a teenage daughter. “But it feels like people are disappeari­ng into sadness. Everybody’s looking for a shrink instead of a sharpened pencil.”

Billie Eilish’s song in the “Barbie” movie, “What Was I Made For?,” became the anthem of anxious and depressed young women, partly because Eilish has been open about her struggles between the ages of 12 and 16, her suicidal thoughts, self-harming and body dysmorphia.

Adolescent despair has been copiously analyzed in recent years: the harm from social media, microtarge­ting algorithms that inflame envy and conflict and divisive politics, unending school shootings, COVID sequestrat­ion, a planet devoured by flames and floods, a “never enough” achievemen­t and consumer culture, anxious adults creating a jittery atmosphere, a digitally connected yet emotionall­y disjointed and spirituall­y unmoored society.

“Young people are taking in a lot of alarming informatio­n, and due to digital devices, they — like many of us — are taking the informatio­n in all day, every day,” said Lisa Damour, the author of “The Emotional Lives of Teenagers.”

It goes beyond the young. The Wall Street Journal ran a front-page story on “The Booming Business of American Anxiety” that began, “A search for ‘anxiety relief’ on Google pulls up links for supplement­s in the form of pills, patches, gummies and mouth sprays. There are vibrating devices that hang around your neck and ‘tone your vagus nerve,’ weighted stuffed animals, beadfilled stress balls and coloring books that claim to bring calm.”

Laurence Steinberg, the author of “You and Your Adult Child,” said that anxiety rises sharply among women in the first half of their 20s, when the brain is still plastic.

“A lot of my friends with adult children have themselves had to get into therapy because they are so stressed out because of their kids’ problems,” Steinberg noted.

He said that coping mechanisms must be taught. “I don’t think that we should just be handing out pills and thinking that that’s going to take care of it,” he said.

Perhaps women get hit harder because they are more intricatel­y wired on emotions and more focused on conversati­on, relationsh­ips, intimacy, nurturing and feminine community, as we see from hunter-gatherer times to Jane Austen novels to “Real Housewives.”

A friend’s 19-year-old daughter, who was on Prozac for a time, explained, “COVID happened just as we were entering the world and first starting to see each other as your own person, your own woman. All we were able to do was obsess over TikTok, which is full of misinforma­tion. The world was apocalypti­c outside, while at home our world was also a little apocalypti­c because we were losing a sense of ourselves.” But, as she texted her mom Friday, “We will be OK. Women tend to make it.”

 ?? ?? Maureen Dowd
Maureen Dowd

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