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There is a depressing familiarity now to the conversations I'm hearing among parents of teenagers. After the obligatory pleasantries, talk often turns to mental health. Someone's daughter is struggling, battling body image issues. Someone's son is sullen and lost in video games. The parental concerns of previous generations (sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll) have been replaced by a new triumvirate: anxiety, depression and suicidal ideation.
As a parent of a teenager, I see this world every day. It's the message I hear from my peers. So I've been following the discussion of rising teenage anxiety with intense interest — in particular, the role of social media, secularization and politics in immiserating our children. But there's a factor that's received insufficient attention in the debate over external factors in teenage suffering: What if the call is also coming from inside the house? What if parents are inadvertently contributing to their own kids' pain?
Just as there is a depressing familiarity to parents' conversations about their children, there is a similar familiarity to kids' conversations about their parents. I spend much of my time traveling to college campuses, both secular and religious, and I hear a similar refrain all the time: "Something happened to my parents." Sometimes (especially at elite schools) they share stories about parents obsessed with their kids' education. More often I hear about parents consumed by politics. And at the extreme end, I hear stories about the impact of conspiracy theories of all kinds. Just as parents are upset about their children's anxiety and depression, children are anxious about their parents' mental health.
First, let's map out the very bleak landscape. In 2021, nearly 60% of teenage girls reported feeling "persistent sadness," Azeen Ghorayshi and Roni Caryn Rabin wrote in the New York Times. Overall, 44% of teenagers reported "persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness," according to the Washington Post, an increase from 26% in 2009. These are the familiar numbers — the scary uptick that has spawned soul-searching across the length and breadth of this land.
But let's place them in a grim context. The same year that 44% of teenagers reported suffering from serious sadness, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 41.5% of adults reported "recent symptoms of an anxiety or depressive disorder," an increase from an already high baseline of 36.4% just months before.
Moreover, while suicide rates have gone up in the youngest cohort of Americans, they still materially lag behind suicide rates among their parents and grandparents. Deaths of despair — the name for deaths due to suicide, drug abuse or alcohol poisoning — have particularly afflicted white middle-aged men, and the numbers overall are simply staggering, especially since they started to increase sharply in 2000.