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Parenting - Child Development - Family.

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Child & Family


1 -How to Build a Perfect Bond with Your Children?
2 -Understanding Teen Anger...How parents can help ?
3 -Signs of Depression in Teens 
4 -Missing children
5 -4 Ways to Balance Family and School
6 -Child Anger Management: Help Your Children to Manage and Direct Their Anger in Healthy Ways
7 -Creating An Anger Management Worksheet To Help
8 -Adolescent Anger Management Strategies.
9-Anger Medication: Is It the Only Alternative?
10 -Learning Sound Parenting Skills is Essential.
11 -The Importance of Bonding and Touch; Advice for First-Time Parents
12 -When Your Teen's Runaway.
13 -How to Be a Street Smart?


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Signs of Depression in Teens



Parenting assumes the role that is more important than school education. Among other aspects, parenting involves helping the child to develop an overall personality. Have you ever paid attention to the type of music your child is playing? Have you noticed whether he is writing poetry? Have you ever thought about the manner in which they dress? Observations like these can actually trigger thoughts in your mind about certain developments that may be taking place in your child’s mind. Keeping your eyes open about these developments can help you to seek teen depression help at the right time.
Give one of our Professional Counselors a try!

depressive girlChild depression is becoming increasingly common due to high levels of societal and parental pressure. Childhood has ceased to comprise of fun, innocent mischief, quality time spent with parents, games, travel and friendships. It is now marked by competition, ambition, and struggle for success at all times.

Teens face additional pressure from within as their bodies undergo drastic changes during early adolescence. Handling the various situations that accompany puberty is not an easy task. Virginity, sex, breasts, penis size, menstruation and hair growth are all aspects that create disturbances in the minds of the teenager.

Give one of our Professional Counselors a try!  
It is impossible to determine how a teenager   will respond to the various challenges that puberty,society,   and parents present to  them. There is a  great likelihood of things going awry in such   conditions if there is inadequate parental   support.Such pressures can at times  be imaginary. It is no  wonder that one in every  five  teens suffers from teen   depression  in  some  or the other.

Signs of depression are hard to notice. In the case  of teens, identification requires keen observation. This can sometimes mean prying into  the life of your teen. As a responsible parent,you should be in a position to recognize the symptoms of teen depression so that you can take corrective measures before the condition blows out of proportion.

If your child has suddenly started paying less attention to the way he/she looks, you have reason to investigate further. Crying and tears are the not the only manner in which a child expresses his sadness. Children have different ways of expression. Some of these could be wearing shabby clothes, not bathing regularly, not combing/grooming hair, or styling hair wildly in weird, attention-seeking hairdos.
Another sign that there is something terribly wrong going on in the teenage mind is an inability or a refusal to enjoy previously enjoyed activities. Teenagers and children tend to lock themselves in isolation if their minds are engulfed in negativity. Fun starts to make them feel guilty of having a good time in face of perceived pressures or grief.

A sudden unexplained drop in grades at school is another indication your teen may need depression help. Teens are normally consistent in their performance at studies, unless they are troubled by internal or extraneous thoughts or events.If your child is absconding from school or acting out without any provocation, he is probably trying to compensate for the frustration, sadness, or dejection that has taken over.

Unrealistic parental expectations and punishment usually drive teens towards depression. Change in teen behavior is not always a sign of inefficiency or limited abilities. Your teen may be passing through a temporary phase that requires your attention and support to be overcome. ( Source: Tess Thompson)


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