Tag: Teen Mental Health

Signs a Teen May Be Depressed: What Parents Should Notice

Teen Counseling Resource Center

Signs a Teen May Be Depressed

Depression in teens may not always look like sadness. It can show up as irritability, withdrawal, sleep changes, low motivation, emotional shutdown, loss of interest, changes in appetite, or a decline in school functioning. Parents may notice that their teen seems different, disconnected, easily frustrated, or unable to enjoy things that used to matter.

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Teen Depression Can Look Different Than Adult Depression

Many parents expect depression to look like constant sadness or crying. While some teens do appear sad, others may look angry, numb, distant, tired, restless, unmotivated, or emotionally shut down. A teen may say they are “fine” while their behavior, sleep, schoolwork, friendships, or mood suggest that something deeper is happening.

Depression can affect how a teen thinks, feels, behaves, relates to others, and functions at school. It may interfere with motivation, concentration, self-worth, decision-making, energy, and the ability to experience pleasure or connection.

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Warning Signs

Common Signs a Teen May Be Depressed

Depression may develop gradually, and parents may initially wonder whether the changes are “normal teenage moodiness.” A pattern of changes that lasts, worsens, or interferes with daily functioning deserves attention.

Irritability or Anger

A depressed teen may seem easily annoyed, reactive, impatient, argumentative, or unusually sensitive to feedback.

Withdrawal

Teens may pull away from family, friends, activities, hobbies, sports, church, or social situations they once enjoyed.

Sleep Changes

Depression may involve sleeping much more, sleeping too little, staying up late, struggling to wake up, or feeling tired all day.

Low Motivation

A teen may stop trying, avoid responsibilities, fall behind, or seem unable to start tasks that used to feel manageable.

Emotional Shutdown

Some teens feel numb, disconnected, flat, or unable to explain what is wrong, even when they know they are not okay.

School Changes

Depression may affect grades, attendance, concentration, homework completion, classroom participation, or relationships at school.

Irritability

Teen Depression May Show Up as Anger, Not Sadness

Parents may expect a depressed teen to look visibly sad, but many teens express depression through irritability, frustration, or anger. They may snap over small things, react strongly to limits, become defensive, or seem like they are pushing everyone away.

This does not mean every angry teen is depressed. However, if irritability is persistent, intense, or paired with withdrawal, sleep changes, hopelessness, low motivation, or loss of interest, it may be a sign that something more serious is happening underneath the surface.

Sometimes anger is the emotion parents can see, while sadness, shame, loneliness, hopelessness, or emotional exhaustion are hidden underneath.

Withdrawal

Pulling Away Can Be a Sign of Emotional Overload

A depressed teen may spend more time alone, stop responding to friends, avoid family conversations, lose interest in hobbies, or seem emotionally unavailable. Parents may describe the teen as “not themselves” or “hard to reach.”

Withdrawal can be confusing because teens also naturally need privacy and independence. The concern increases when isolation is paired with mood changes, loss of interest, school decline, hopeless statements, or reduced daily functioning.

Withdrawal may look like:

  • Staying in the bedroom most of the time
  • Stopping activities or hobbies
  • Avoiding family meals or conversations
  • Pulling away from close friends
  • Not wanting to go places they used to enjoy
  • Appearing emotionally flat, numb, or disconnected

A teen who is withdrawing may not know how to ask for help. Gentle, steady connection can matter, even when a teen does not respond warmly at first.

School Functioning

Depression Can Affect Motivation, Concentration, and School Performance

Depression can make ordinary school tasks feel overwhelming. A teen may struggle to concentrate, remember assignments, complete homework, study for tests, attend class consistently, or care about grades. This may look like laziness from the outside, but depression can make effort feel emotionally and physically exhausting.

A teen may also avoid school because of shame. Once they fall behind, they may feel embarrassed, discouraged, or convinced they cannot catch up. This can create a painful cycle of avoidance, falling further behind, and feeling worse.

School-related signs may include:

  • Missing assignments or falling grades
  • Difficulty concentrating or remembering work
  • Skipping school or frequently asking to stay home
  • Loss of interest in future goals
  • Giving up quickly or saying, “What’s the point?”
  • Increased conflict about homework or responsibilities

Physical and Daily Changes

Depression Can Affect the Body and Daily Routines

Depression is not only emotional. Teens may experience changes in sleep, appetite, energy, hygiene, movement, headaches, stomachaches, or general physical complaints. Some teens feel heavy, slowed down, and exhausted. Others feel restless, tense, or unable to settle.

Parents may notice that routines become harder. A teen may stop taking care of themselves, struggle to get out of bed, avoid basic responsibilities, or seem drained by ordinary tasks.

Sleep changes Low energy Appetite changes Headaches Stomachaches Low motivation Isolation Emotional numbness

For Parents

How Parents Can Respond When They Are Concerned

It can be difficult to know how to respond when a teen seems depressed. Parents may feel scared, frustrated, helpless, or unsure whether to push harder or give more space. A helpful first step is to approach the teen with calm concern rather than criticism.

Instead of beginning with grades, chores, or attitude, parents can start by naming what they notice. For example: “I’ve noticed you seem more withdrawn lately, and I’m concerned about you.” This communicates care without turning the conversation into an argument.

Helpful parent responses include:

  • Use a calm tone and avoid shaming language.
  • Ask open-ended questions and allow silence.
  • Validate that things may feel hard, even if you do not fully understand.
  • Watch for changes in sleep, appetite, school, social life, and safety.
  • Offer counseling support rather than framing therapy as punishment.
  • Seek immediate help if there are safety concerns.

Parents do not have to solve everything in one conversation. Consistent, calm, nonjudgmental concern can help a teen feel less alone.

Safety Concerns

When Teen Depression Requires Immediate Support

Some signs require urgent attention. If a teen talks about wanting to die, not wanting to be here, feeling like a burden, self-harm, suicide, or having no reason to live, parents should take those statements seriously and seek immediate support.

If a teen may be at risk of self-harm or suicide, call or text 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, call 911, go to the nearest emergency room, or contact local crisis services. See our Crisis Resources Page for a list of additional emergency & crisis services.

Do not leave a teen alone if there is an immediate safety concern. Remove access to weapons, medications, or other means of self-harm when possible.

Safety concerns may include:

  • Talking or writing about death, suicide, or not wanting to live
  • Self-harm or threats of self-harm
  • Giving away belongings or saying goodbye
  • Sudden hopelessness or feeling like a burden
  • Risky behavior that seems out of character
  • Sudden calm after a period of severe distress

How Counseling Helps

Teen Counseling Can Help Depression Feel Less Overwhelming

Teen counseling provides a supportive space for teens to talk about what they are experiencing, understand their emotions, develop coping skills, and identify patterns that may be contributing to depression. Therapy can also help teens communicate with parents, rebuild routines, improve emotional awareness, and develop a healthier sense of self-worth.

Counseling is not about blaming the teen or telling them to “just be positive.” It is about helping the teen feel seen, supported, and better equipped to manage what is happening internally and in daily life.

Counseling may focus on:

  • Understanding depression symptoms and triggers
  • Improving emotional expression and communication
  • Reducing isolation and avoidance
  • Building coping skills and daily routines
  • Addressing negative self-talk and hopeless thoughts
  • Supporting school functioning and motivation
  • Improving parent-teen communication
  • Creating a safety plan when needed

When to Seek Help

Signs It May Be Time for Professional Support

A teen does not have to be in crisis to benefit from counseling. Support may be helpful when depression symptoms are lasting, worsening, or interfering with daily functioning.

Your Teen Is Withdrawing

They are spending more time alone, avoiding friends or family, and no longer seem interested in connection.

Motivation Has Dropped

Your teen seems unable to start tasks, keep up with responsibilities, or care about things that used to matter.

School Is Affected

Grades, attendance, homework, concentration, or school relationships have changed significantly.

Sleep Has Changed

Your teen is sleeping too much, too little, staying up very late, or struggling to wake up.

Self-Worth Is Low

They frequently describe themselves as a failure, not good enough, hopeless, or a burden.

Safety Concerns Appear

Any talk of self-harm, suicide, not wanting to live, or feeling unsafe should be taken seriously.

Learning Center

Continue Learning About Teen Depression, Anxiety, and Emotional Health

These related resources can help parents and teens better understand depression, anxiety, school stress, emotional overwhelm, counseling options, and mental health support.

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Support for Teens Experiencing Depression

If your teen seems withdrawn, irritable, shut down, unmotivated, hopeless, or no longer like themselves, counseling can help them feel supported and better understood.

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Teen Anxiety and School Stress: How Academic Pressure Affects Mental Health

Teen Counseling Resource Center

Teen Anxiety and School Stress

Academic pressure, social stress, performance fears, and emotional overwhelm can affect a teen’s mental health, motivation, confidence, sleep, and daily functioning. When school stress becomes intense, it may not look like anxiety at first. It may look like procrastination, irritability, avoidance, perfectionism, shutdown, or a sudden loss of motivation.

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When School Stress Becomes More Than Normal Pressure

It is normal for teens to feel some stress about tests, homework, grades, sports, friendships, college planning, or future goals. A certain amount of pressure can help students stay organized and motivated. However, school stress becomes more concerning when it begins to interfere with daily life.

Teen anxiety may show up as constant worry, irritability, avoidance, emotional shutdown, panic symptoms, trouble sleeping, stomachaches, headaches, or a sudden drop in motivation. Some teens become overwhelmed by the fear of failing. Others feel trapped by expectations they do not know how to meet.

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Academic Pressure

Why Teens Feel So Much Pressure at School

Teenagers today often manage far more than assignments and tests. They may feel pressure to earn high grades, maintain friendships, perform in activities, prepare for college, manage social expectations, and meet family expectations.

Academic Demands

Tests, grades, deadlines, advanced classes, college preparation, and fear of falling behind can create ongoing stress.

Social Stress

Friend groups, peer judgment, exclusion, social media, bullying, or relationship conflict can make school feel emotionally unsafe.

Performance Fears

Teens may worry about disappointing parents, teachers, coaches, or themselves if they do not perform well.

Emotional Overwhelm

When stress builds for too long, teens may become tired, numb, avoidant, tearful, angry, or unable to focus.

Too Many Demands

Homework, practices, jobs, chores, family responsibilities, and social expectations may leave little room for recovery.

Internal Pressure

Some teens believe they must be perfect, avoid mistakes, keep everyone happy, or prove they are capable at all times.

Signs of School Anxiety

Teen Anxiety Does Not Always Look Like Fear

Some teens look responsible and successful on the outside while feeling overwhelmed internally. Others may seem unmotivated, oppositional, or withdrawn when anxiety is actually part of the struggle. Because teen anxiety can look different from teen to teen, parents may not immediately recognize what is happening.

Emotional Signs

  • Frequent worry about grades, tests, teachers, or assignments
  • Irritability, mood swings, or tearfulness after school
  • Fear of disappointing parents or not being good enough
  • Feeling overwhelmed, trapped, or unable to catch up
  • Low confidence or harsh self-criticism

Behavioral Signs

  • Avoiding homework, school, activities, or difficult assignments
  • Procrastinating because the task feels too overwhelming
  • Repeatedly asking for reassurance
  • Withdrawing from family or friends
  • Becoming perfectionistic or spending excessive time on schoolwork

Physical Signs

  • Headaches, stomachaches, nausea, or muscle tension
  • Trouble sleeping or waking up tired
  • Panic-like symptoms before tests or school events
  • Changes in appetite
  • Fatigue or low energy

Avoidance and Motivation

Why Anxiety Can Look Like Laziness, Defiance, or Low Motivation

One of the most frustrating parts of teen anxiety is that it can be misunderstood. A teen who avoids assignments may not be lazy. A teen who shuts down during conversations may not be trying to be disrespectful. A teen who seems angry may actually feel scared, embarrassed, or overwhelmed.

When anxiety becomes intense, the brain often shifts into survival mode. Instead of calmly planning, organizing, and problem-solving, a teen may freeze, avoid, argue, or escape. This can create tension at home because parents may focus on the missing assignment, while the teen is internally focused on the fear of failure or shame.

Avoidance can temporarily reduce anxiety, but it often makes the problem bigger. The longer a teen avoids schoolwork, conversations, or responsibilities, the more pressure builds.

Self-Worth and Achievement

School Stress Can Become Tied to a Teen’s Identity

Many teens begin to connect their grades, achievements, or performance with their sense of worth. When things go well, they may feel confident. When they struggle, they may feel like they are failing as a person.

A grade is information, not a measure of personal value. A difficult semester does not define a teen’s future. Learning how to respond to setbacks with flexibility and self-compassion is an important part of emotional development.

High-achieving teens may struggle with:

  • Feeling pressure to maintain an image of success
  • Being afraid to ask for help
  • Interpreting mistakes as failure
  • Feeling embarrassed when school becomes difficult
  • Believing rest or limits mean they are falling behind
  • Judging themselves harshly for normal struggles

Counseling can help teens separate performance from identity and build healthier ways to manage expectations, setbacks, and self-criticism.

Social Stress

Social Pressure Can Make School Feel Even Harder

School anxiety is not limited to academics. Many teens are also managing complicated social dynamics. They may worry about fitting in, being judged, being excluded, saying the wrong thing, losing friends, or being embarrassed in front of others.

Social media can intensify this pressure. Teens may compare themselves to classmates, monitor how they are perceived, or feel left out when they see others spending time together. Even when social media is not the direct cause of anxiety, it can make school stress feel constant because the social world follows them home.

Social stress may lead to:

  • Withdrawing from friends or activities
  • Overthinking conversations after they happen
  • Trying to please everyone to avoid rejection
  • Feeling left out or not good enough
  • Fear of being judged, embarrassed, or excluded
  • Emotional exhaustion after school

Performance Anxiety

Fear of Failure Can Keep Teens Stuck

Performance anxiety can affect teens in many settings: tests, presentations, sports, auditions, competitions, college applications, or even ordinary classroom participation. The teen may know the material but freeze under pressure. They may prepare for hours and still feel convinced they will fail.

Fear of failure can also lead to procrastination. This may seem backwards, but it often makes emotional sense. If a teen is afraid they cannot do something perfectly, starting the task can feel threatening. Avoiding it helps them postpone the discomfort, even though it creates more stress later.

Test anxiety Perfectionism Procrastination Fear of mistakes Overthinking Self-criticism Reassurance seeking Shutdown

For Parents

How Parents Can Support a Teen with School Anxiety

Parents often want to help but may feel unsure whether to push, protect, problem-solve, or back off. When teens are overwhelmed, repeated lectures about grades or responsibility may increase shame and defensiveness. At the same time, completely removing expectations may unintentionally reinforce avoidance.

A helpful approach often begins with curiosity. Instead of only asking, “Why didn’t you do the assignment?” a parent might ask, “What part felt hardest to start?” or “What were you worried would happen?” These questions help identify whether the issue is organization, confusion, perfectionism, fear, exhaustion, or emotional overwhelm.

Helpful parent responses include:

  • Validate the stress without agreeing that the situation is hopeless.
  • Break large tasks into smaller steps.
  • Focus on effort, process, and coping rather than only grades.
  • Encourage sleep, meals, movement, and downtime.
  • Ask what support would feel helpful before giving advice.
  • Seek counseling support when anxiety begins interfering with functioning.

Parents do not have to choose between compassion and structure. Many anxious teens need both emotional support and realistic expectations.

How Counseling Helps

Teen Counseling Can Help Students Understand and Manage School Stress

Teen counseling can help students better understand what is happening internally when school stress becomes overwhelming. Therapy is not simply about telling a teen to try harder. It is about identifying the emotional, cognitive, relational, and practical factors that are keeping the teen stuck.

A counselor may help a teen recognize anxious thought patterns, develop grounding skills, improve emotional regulation, strengthen problem-solving, communicate more effectively with parents, and build confidence in facing stressful situations.

Counseling may focus on:

  • Understanding anxiety symptoms and triggers
  • Reducing avoidance and procrastination
  • Building coping skills for tests, deadlines, and presentations
  • Improving communication between teens and parents
  • Addressing perfectionism and fear of failure
  • Strengthening confidence, motivation, and resilience
  • Creating realistic routines and stress-management strategies

When to Seek Help

Signs School Stress May Need Professional Support

A teen does not have to be in crisis to benefit from support. Counseling may be helpful when school stress is no longer temporary or manageable.

School Avoidance

Your teen avoids classes, assignments, activities, or conversations about school because the pressure feels too overwhelming.

Sleep Problems

Stress is affecting sleep, energy, concentration, or the ability to recover from daily demands.

Withdrawal

Your teen is pulling away from family, friends, activities, or interests they previously enjoyed.

Panic or Shutdown

Tests, presentations, assignments, or school mornings lead to panic-like symptoms, freezing, or emotional shutdown.

Low Confidence

Your teen seems increasingly self-critical, hopeless, embarrassed, or convinced they cannot succeed.

Family Conflict

Conversations about school repeatedly turn into arguments, defensiveness, frustration, or emotional distance.

Learning Center

Continue Learning About Teen Anxiety, School Stress, and Emotional Health

These related resources can help parents and teens better understand anxiety, emotional overwhelm, counseling options, and mental health support.

Start Counseling

Support for Teen Anxiety and School Stress

If school stress is affecting your teen’s confidence, motivation, mood, sleep, or daily functioning, counseling can help them better understand what they are experiencing and develop healthier ways to cope.

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