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Honestly with Bari Weiss

Why the Kids Aren't Alright

Honestly with Bari Weiss

The Free Press

Society & Culture, News

4.6 • 7.8K Ratings

🗓️ 27 February 2024

⏱️ 84 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

American kids are the freest, most privileged kids in all of history. They are also the saddest, most anxious, depressed, and medicated generation on record. Nearly a third of teen girls say they have seriously considered suicide. For boys, that number is an alarming 14 percent.  What’s even stranger is that all of these worsening mental health outcomes for kids have coincided with a generation of parents hyper-fixated on the mental health and well-being of their children. Take, for example, the biggest parenting trend today: “gentle parenting.” Parents today are told to understand their kids’ feelings instead of punishing them when they act out. This emphasis on the importance of feelings is not just a parenting trend—it’s become an educational tool as well. “Social-emotional learning” has become a pillar in public schools across America, from kindergarten to high school. And maybe most significantly, therapy for children has been normalized. In fact, there are more kids in therapy today than ever before.  On the surface, all of these parenting and educational developments seem positive. We are told that parents and educators today are more understanding, more accepting, more empathetic, and more compassionate than ever before—which, in turn, makes wonderful children. But is that really the case? Are all of these changes—the cultural rethink, the advent of therapy culture, of gentle parenting, of teaching kids about social-emotional learning—actually making our kids better? Best-selling author Abigail Shrier says no. In her new book, Bad Therapy: Why the Kids Aren't Growing Up, Shrier argues that these changes are directly contributing to kids’ mental health decline. In other words: all of this shiny new stuff is actually making our kids worse.  Today: What’s gone wrong with American youth? What really happens to kids who get therapy but don’t actually need it? In our attempt to keep kids safe, are we failing the next generation of adults? And, if yes, how do we reverse it before it’s too late? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is brought to you by Guinness. Official beer of the Premier League is quite the title, but for Guinness it feels earned.

0:08.0

After all, the Premier League and the Black Stuff have a common goal, bringing people together in packed pubs and front rooms for

0:14.7

donkey's ears.

0:16.2

And now, so is Guinness Zero, the same beautiful Guinness Taste with no alcohol.

0:21.6

Guinness, the official beer and non-alcoholic beer of the Premier League.

0:25.2

18 plus, please drink responsibly. For the facts, visit Drinkaware.co. UK.

0:30.4

I'm Barry Weiss and this is honestly.

0:34.0

At least once a day I think to myself, what the hell is happening to American kids?

0:40.0

An influential national panel of health experts is recommending for the first time that children

0:45.2

ages 8 and up be screened for anxiety.

0:48.4

The CDC estimates that in 2020, nearly 6 million kids in the US were diagnosed with anxiety.

0:55.0

In a recent report covering 80,000 youth globally, it found that symptoms of depression and anxiety

0:59.9

doubled during the pandemic, with 25% of youth experiencing symptoms of

1:03.9

depression and 20% experiencing symptoms of anxiety.

1:07.4

5.8 million kids were diagnosed with anxiety between 2016 and 2019.

1:13.0

Researchers at Florida Atlantic University

1:15.0

have found that suicide rates are climbing among 13 and 14 year olds.

1:19.0

The study found that suicide rates for teens

1:21.0

more than double from 2008 to 2018.

1:25.0

In the 10 years leading up to the pandemic there was a 40% increase in young people

1:31.0

feeling sad and hopeless.

1:35.1

The paradox is clear.

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