Teens Or Self Absorbed Hedonists?
Teenagers are the most adaptive and private members of any age group. They quickly create and break friendships, join fashions, and demonstrate fierce allegiance to any political or popular ideology.
Teenagers adore their freedom of choice because they often feel like the center of their universe, which can make them appear conceited.
Nonetheless, they act in adolescent ways for a purpose. They are continuously attempting to maintain their sense of identity in order to keep up with their rapid mental and physical growth as well as changes to their friends and others in their environment, which is why they have a narcissistic attitude.
Teenagers live a life of pleasure and little self-control, or so it seems. Yes, sometimes they engage in activities with impulsivity, and a lack of responsibility and little to no regard for the consequences.
Teens also like withholding information and faking ignorance. But are they really the famous hedonists we have made them out to be? Not really, deep inside their true self is a kind, funny and optimistic human waiting to be discovered.
Prone To Risky Behaviors?
Here’s a little about the teen decision making process:
Teenage is the age of many firsts and as a result, the pull of novelty in decision making is high. Otherwise, at what age would one experience their first love, their first paycheck, their first car ride as a driver, and ultimately their first taste at independence?
Novelty, along with danger, and unpredictability sharply increases the rewards and the feel-good hormones called Dopamine that occur in anyone’s brain. And these dopamine spikes, inside a still developing prefrontal cortex (the rational part of the brain) can contribute in a major way in their decision-making process.
Lastly, teens find safety in groups. Teenage is an age when the brain is highly sensitive to social influence. Surveys have shown that teens are on their cellphones, mostly because their friends are too and there’s nothing much else that they find stimulating in the real world.
–

–
How Teens Begin To Rebel
As children turn into tweens and teens, they start to get their first sense of freedom. They like the idea so much so that they start seeking independence. They want to understand the effect of their leverage and pull in society with those around them. Along with this, they also quickly realize that they have to start meeting expectations and obligations.
As a result, they become overwhelmed with responsibilities and start procrastinating. Of course, procrastination leads to anxiety. And then they start resisting, lying and retrieving into their own shell.
A Case for Seeking Help
Teens, both boys and girls, don’t actively seek help in high school or college. The stereotypes go like this. You don’t engage with teachers because you don’t want to be seen as someone who didn’t get a concept or understand something that was taught in class. You don’t engage with counselors or school social workers because you don’t want to be seen as weak and soft.
But, even as adults, we all know that we need help sometimes. And teens definitely need help. How else will they navigate what high school is throwing at them? They must be taught to understand that there are strategies to deal with:
* Bad breakups
* Fights with mom and siblings
* Surviving getting disbanded from a close group of friends
* Parents divorcing
* Moving to a new high school
* Addiction to tech etc etc.
If we don’t teach our children what stress looks and feels like, and when it is smart enough to quit figuring out on their own and seek help, who will?
– 0 –
About The Article Author:
Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.
One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.
Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.
Check Out Our Latest In Mindful Parenting!
If You’ve Been Searching for Joy, Read This
- Chasing Permanent Happiness Many years ago, in my early thirties, I started asking myself why I wasn’t truly happy. A vital relationship in my life was in shambles, and a series of unfortunate misunderstandings had left things hopelessly deadlocked. But,...
Most of Us Only Become Remarkable by Dying Too Soon: Lessons on Life and Legacy
- The Untimely Remarkable: Valuing Life Before Loss Many years ago, I wrote in a poem: “Only untimely deaths make most of us remarkable.” What I meant was that, too often, our brilliance is only acknowledged if our life is cut abruptly short. Here's the truth....
Meta AI Scandal: Leaked Guidelines Allowed Chatbots to Flirt With Children
https://youtu.be/tSgvsXe-cwE - Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Meta AI's Perilous Child Chat Guidelines 🚨 Multiple news outlets are reporting on a controversy surrounding Meta AI's internal guidelines for chatbots interacting with...
Smartphones Are Destroying Young Minds Faster Than Any Technology in History
- Smartphones: A Civilizational Threat to Human Cognition 🧠📵 An opinion piece by Colby Hall in Mediaite, titled “Alarming New Study Finds Smartphones Ruining Our Brains at Unprecedented Speed,” is going viral. And rightfully so, because it warns that...
How To Reclaim Your Mind And Keep Your Agency In The Age Of AI And Distraction {Video}
- Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Reclaiming Agency: Mind, AI, and Digital Distraction 🧠 Hi all, I've used AI to generate this video, but please note, I haven't outsourced my thought but only my task to create this. My original script that has been...
Reclaiming Your Mind: How to Keep Your Agency in the Age of AI and Endless Distraction
- Losing Agency Voluntarily I remember the first time I said the word “Agency” out loud. I was in my mom's kitchen in our village of Poranki looking out of our balcony. Fifty feet across in our neighbor's balcony, an old woman was getting bathed by her son and...
Child Bearers of the World – Review of a Poem on Loneliness, Loss, Survival, and Inheritance 💔
- Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Child Bearers: Loneliness, Loss, Survival, and Inheritance 💔 Child Bearers of the World - What Remains by Rachana, is a poem exploring themes of loneliness, loss, survival, and inheritance, specifically...
How Smartphones Are Stealing 25 Years From Students’ Lives
- Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Students & Mobile Phones: A 25-Year Habit 📱 A recent UK study by Fluid Focus highlights a startling trend: students across schools, colleges, and universities are spending an average of 5 hours and 30...
It’s Your One Brilliant Life — Are You Putting Up a Good Fight?
- Questions About Life Allow me to sound fatalistic before I get to the bright happy point of this essay AND our lives. The more I ponder life and the point of our existence, I draw the same few conclusions every time. That the duty of every human being is to...
David Baldacci Slams Big Tech as AI Threatens Copyright Protection for All Creators
- The Need For Updating the Copyright Law David Baldacci, an American novelist, is hitting back hard at Big Tech over AI and copyright. He went to a Senate Judiciary Hearing this month to lay out how the tech giants are exploiting author content. He insists...
When Children Are Giving Away Signs Of Emotional Struggles, Are We Listening To Them?
https://youtu.be/V40EthHkvAo - Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Noticing Mental Health Struggles in Children This article from "The Mentor Well," focuses on identifying subtle indicators that a child might be experiencing mental health...
Writer-At-Large – A Mother’s Words for the Ache of Missing Her Children
Kanu dappika "కను దప్పిక", which when translated from Telugu literally means “the thirst of the eye”, is what my mother told me she feels for me and my sister from 8000 miles away. As soon as she said those two words, I knew she was helping me describe the kind of...











