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Sunday, 10 April 2022

'Why Kids Are Suffering'

image from google

Sharing snippets from an article by Peter Gray Ph.D.

"Why Kids Are Suffering:
Our society prevents young people from satisfying three crucial human needs.

... a prerequisite for a healthy sense of self-determination, and hence for mental well-being and satisfaction with life, is that we fulfil three basic psychological needs— the needs to experience autonomy, competence, and relatedness.

... Peter has long been concerned with the continuous rise, over roughly the past 50 years, in the rates of depression, anxiety, and suicides among children and teens. This increase in suffering has occurred during a period in which young people have been subjected to ever-increasing amounts of time being supervised, directed, and protected by adults—in school, in adult-run activities outside of school, and at home— and have experienced ever less opportunity to play freely and in other ways pursue their own interests and solve their own problems. The pressure and continuous monitoring and judgments from adults, coupled with loss of freedom to follow their own interests and solve their own problems, results in anxiety, depression, and general dissatisfaction with life.

... Peter examines this relationship between changes in how young people are treated and the decline in their mental well-being through the lens of BPNT, (Basic Psychological Needs Theory). His contention is that we have, over decades, been decreasing children’s opportunities to experience autonomy, competence, and relatedness.

Deprivation of Autonomy
This is obvious. We have in many ways, over the years, been decreasing children’s opportunities to find and pursue their own paths. We have forced them to spend ever more time in school and at homework outside of school, and even within the realm of schoolwork we have decreased the choices they have because of our misguided focus on high-stakes testing. We have greatly reduced recess and added new restrictions on what is allowed in the bits of recess that remain. We have largely stopped allowing children to go outdoors to play in their own chosen ways away from adults. We have, instead, put them into adult-directed sports and other such activities, where they are again told what to do and are constantly judged and corrected by adults.

Deprivation of Competence
By drastically limiting and restricting children’s choices of activities, we have also drastically limited their opportunities to develop feelings of competence. School is all about “academic achievement” (or what the school defines as that), and, indeed, some children may gain a sense of competence from good performance in school. However, this is not true for all children, probably not for most.

The feeling of competence is not independent of the feeling of autonomy. Research shows that people feel most competent when they succeed in efforts that they themselves have chosen (Vansteenkiste et al, 2020). Most students, even those who get A's and honours, feel motivated largely by external pressures, not from their own internal, autonomous motives. Even so-called “top students” are often cynical about their school achievements because they know how shallow the achievements are. They have learned to memorize and feed back what the teacher or the test wants, and they know that this has little to do with deep, meaningful learning

Traditionally, children and teens have developed a sense of competence by such means as pursuing and becoming skilled at hobbies that they themselves chose; taking on part-time jobs, which provide a taste of success in the work world; and independently performing chores at home, which were real contributions to the family economy. We provide few such opportunities for children and teens today.

Deprivation of Relatedness
The primary way that children make friends is through play. Play is what brings them together, leads them to shared understandings, leads them to value one another, and teaches them how to negotiate and compromise and thereby maintain their friendships. As children get older, into their teens, play continues to be valuable but now they often bond best through long bouts of hanging out with one another and sharing thoughts and feelings. They need to do this away from adults, because their thoughts and feelings are personal, and adults interfere.

But now even teens are commonly deprived of opportunities to get together for long periods, privately, away from adults. They can do it to some degree through Internet platforms, but that’s not the same as getting together in person. Virtual get-togethers tend to be more superficial and less personally bonding than direct face-to-face get-togethers. Of course, children and teens still do make friends. The drive to do so is incredibly strong, so many overcome barriers. But too often they don’t or can’t overcome the barriers sufficiently, so the level of loneliness and alienation is high.

There is reason to believe that even family relationships have suffered because of the strong focus on schoolwork and adult-directed extracurricular activities. As parents become homework monitors and cart their children from one activity to another, the children, especially by the time they are teenagers, may begin to feel that their parents value them only for their achievements and not for who they really are (e.g., Ebbert et al., 2019). Many families no longer eat dinner together because everyone—parents as well as kids—are so busy. It’s interesting, in this regard, that research conducted during the pandemic lockdown revealed that many children and teens were happier than they had been before the lockdown, in part because for the first time they felt they were really getting to know their parents and be known by them, as they were all locked together at home and COVID induced a spirit of care within families.

U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has shown in his best-selling book Together, our social conditions provide barriers to creating and maintaining a network of close family members and intimate friends, and that is a cause of mental suffering for people in all age categories.

Call for Action
The BPNT lens may help clarify what we must do to attack the epidemic of mental suffering afflicting kids in our culture today. We—and by “we” I mean parents, grandparents, teachers, educational policy makers, coaches, children’s librarians, politicians, city planners and everyone in a position to influence children’s worlds—must do what we can to increase children’s experiences of autonomy, competence, and relatedness.

To date, most approaches to young people’s mental suffering have involved therapy, counselling, or drugs, which may be helpful in treating symptoms of the epidemic but do nothing to change the causes. The causes are structural. They lie in the structure of how we do schooling, how we create barriers (such as lack of sidewalks) to children’s outdoor adventures, how we malign parents who dare to give their children some of the freedoms that nearly all children used to enjoy, and how we underestimate children’s capacities for self-direction and personal responsibility."
Full article with all relevant links can be seen here
h/t Marks Daily Apple here 

This blog brings a variety of articles, studies and recipes, and not all may be suitable for you. If you may have any food allergies, or underlying health issues these must always be taken into account. If you are a diabetic and not sure how certain foods may affect your blood sugars, test is best, i.e. use your meter.


As always, thank you for reading this post, it's been good to have your company and do please share your thoughts in the comments section below.

All the best Jan

27 comments:

Christine said...

Thanks for sharing Jan.

J.P. Alexander said...

Buena reflexion y la verdad esta sociedad esta creando jóvenes infelices, mal criados y dependietes. Que no desean crecer ni tener responsabilidades. Te mando un beso.

Elephant's Child said...

Thank you for this thought provoking article. I believe that it is true of all ages, and not just the young.
The way and the pace at which most of us live is simply bad for us.

Tom said...

...we have created a society that isn't always humane.

coffeeontheporchwithme said...

This is such a good article and has hit the nail on the head. Today’s parents often can’t allow their children to be bored. Thanks for sharing this. - Jenn

peppylady (Dora) said...

Glad mental illness is being brought to table.
Coffee is on and stay safe

Jo said...

An interesting article.

eileeninmd said...

Hello,
Great post! Everyone's mental health is important.

Take care, happy Sunday! Have a great new week!

Valerie-Jael said...

hanks for sharing! Have a great Sunday, Valerie

George Pereira said...

Very interesting article.

CJ Kennedy said...

Thought provoking article. I think Elephant's Child and Coffeeon brought up very good points. We live life in the fast lane, and children have so many schedule activities they don't have time to be alone and to entertain themselves.

Salty Pumpkin Studio said...

Good article
It is appalling that recess is cut short.

Inger said...

I have been concerned with this for a long time. I was a child in the 1940s and a teenager in the 1950s, the freedom, the less taxing school work, leaving room for play, games, team sports, skiing, ice skating, horseback riding, once home work was completed. And no parents hovering, we were left to explore on our own. I learned responsibility early, I learned to deal with my problems, my parets were always there to support me, but never hovered. If, as a teenager, I was told to be home by 11 pm, I was home by 11 pm. Out of respect for my parents and not wanting to worry them.

Thanks for this, I never connected the rise in suicides to the lack of autonomy and the other issues mentioned. But now it makes a lot of sense.

NanaDiana said...

Great article. Sometimes in the chase for progress for our children we have lost the essence of childhood. Diana

Giorgio said...

I think the world biological warfare (2020-2022) mainly damaged young people.

Great post!
Have a nice Sunday :-)

DMS said...

Slowing down and connecting more with nature and other people we enjoy is so important. Lots of life is rushed and overscheduled. All people need more time to "choose" what to do (whatever they want- nap, read, think, etc.).
~Jess

Laura. M said...

Creo que es bueno hacer ver a los jovenes los valores para que se hagan responsables y sepan que conseguir algo cuesta. La educación de ahora es distinta. Antes había más respeto, ahora hay mucha permisividad con la juventud.
Buen domingo para todos.
Un abrazo.

Carla from The River said...

Thank you for sharing .. just recently our local school has placed in mandatory sports practice on Sunday's too!!! There is no time for family, fun or nature, it is pressure, pressure to be in this or that or all of it and to be perfect while at it!!

Lowcarb team member said...

GOOGLE TRANSLATE

J.P. Alexander said.
Good reflection and the truth this society is creating unhappy young people, poorly raised and dependent. That they do not want to grow or have responsibilities. I send you a kiss

Laura. M said...
I think it is good to make young people see the values so that they take responsibility and know that achieving something costs. Education now is different. Before there was more respect, now there is a lot of permissiveness with youth.
Good Sunday to all.
A hug

William Kendall said...

Enlightening.

Lee said...

Get them to put away their cell phones etc., would be a good start! Raise their heads, and get out in the fresh air...mix physically with others and look them straight in the eye when conversing.

Louca por porcelana said...

Very very interesting. I hope things get better...

carol l mckenna said...

Yes, society has certainly changed and younger generation are paying the price ~ Well done article and very informative ~ thanks ~ Xo


Wishing you love and laughter in all your days,

A ShutterBut Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)

Conniecrafter said...

I do not have young children or grandkids, but I do know how important it was for my family when I was growing up to have the family eat and talk together and so I made sure that happened in our family and my daughter was very happy for that time.
I do know that the pandemic really messed up all of our ways of doing things, even for adults and how that changed things, and lives.

Teresa said...

Me gusta mucho el reportaje de hoy, es muy interesante y real. Feliz semana.

Jeanie said...

Lots of food for thought in this one, Jan. I wouldn't want to be parenting children today. Not on a bet.

Lowcarb team member said...

GOOGLE TRANSLATE

Teresa said...
I really like today's report, it's very interesting and real. Happy week.