Daily Press

Mom feels like a failure with struggling teens

- Adapted from an online discussion. Email tellme@washpost. com or write “Tell Me About It” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071

Hello, Carolyn: Yesterday my teenage son was diagnosed with anxiety disorder and was prescribed meds. Two months ago, my teen daughter was diagnosed with depression and put on meds. I’ve been a stay-at-home mom their whole lives and, along with my husband, their dad, have done my absolute best to raise them to be healthy and happy.

We love them immeasurab­ly and do our best every day to support, listen to and nurture them. I’m feeling like such a failure that both my kids are struggling. Can you help me frame this better?

How did I screw up the one incredibly important thing I was supposed to be doing? — Mom Failure

Dear Mom Failure: Stop, you did not “screw up.”

Kids everywhere are having an extraordin­arily difficult time right now. Depression and anxiety are way up, stress is up, mental health resources are strained, and schools are overburden­ed, underfunde­d and understaff­ed.

You got your kids the help they need! You’re doing your job. Your listening, support and nurture are what they need as they learn to manage these conditions — whether these are isolated episodes or the beginnings of chronic conditions. They’re often genetic, meaning no amount of maternal magic would have preempted them. (And no, your genes aren’t your fault, either.) Reflect on your choices to learn, absolutely — but not to beat yourself up. No point.

A cautionary reframe might help, too: To declare yourself a “failure” because your kids have mental health diagnoses is a form of shaming, as if such diagnoses are so awful that no good parent would ever let them happen and no child can succeed with them. Struggle is universal. How people deal with struggle is what determines health, happiness, success. Including yours, as a parent, as you struggle to meet your kids’ needs.

Readers’ thoughts:

In 2000 — meaning pre-9/11 and all the ways it changed the world, ubiquitous cellphones, social media, pandemic, etc. — the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n found that average kids were more anxious than kids in psychiatri­c treatment in the 1950s.

Think about that:

The level of stress that warranted childhood psychiatri­c treatment in 1950 was less than the stress that everyone considered a “normal” part of being a kid in 2000. And things have only gotten a lot more stressful for kids since.

Honestly, you should be so proud of yourself for getting your kids treatment — that’s good parenting.

Don’t think it’s your “fault.” At least until your kids start blaming you. No need to enter it voluntaril­y.

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