November, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/Nov_2008.htm
• Alcohol Use Among Hispanic Youth
• The Choking Game - New Deadly High
• Steroid Use and How to Test Your Kids
• Parents' Alcoholism - One Teen's Story (from Al-Anon/Alateen)
October, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/Oct_2008.htm
• Alcohol Pouches Appeal to Teens
• Energy Drinks linked to Teenage Risky Behavior
• Negative Childhood Experiences Precipitate Earlier Drinking
• Prescription Drug Use on the Rise – A National Concern
• Mouthwash to Get High
September, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/Sept_2008.htm
• How Clothing Fits in Adolescence
• Teens and Stress: What 93% of Parents Do NOT Know
• ANNOUNCING NEW STRESS MANAGEMENT WORKBOOK from LEGACY!
August, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/Aug_2008.htm
• Hip Hop Culture: More than Meets the Eye
• Hipster Subculture: Cooler than the Cool Kids?
• Nerd Revolution
• Jock Image - Rethinking
• Mom’s are Cliquing, too?
June/July, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/July_2008.htm
• Childhood Obesity: How America's Children Packed on the Pounds
• Help My Overweight Child
• Body Image: Men and Boys Lack Treatment Options
• Young Girls and Body Image: When Mothers Stop Being Role Models
• A Toolkit for Healthy Girls and Strong Women
May, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/May_2008.htm
• Observations from the Road - Susie Vanderlip
• Current Drug Trends in America's Youth
• Parenting/Grandparenting Tools
• Girls Most Frequent Abuser of Prescription Drugs
• Prevent Prescription Medicine Abuse
• Help School Nurses Address Rx Abuse
• Group Therapy Works for Youngest Addicts/Teens
April, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/April_2008.htm
• 21 Minimum Drinking Age Effectiveness
• Alcohol Ed and Drivers Ed Together
• Parents Driving Drunk with Children in Car
• Training for Alcohol Servers
March, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/Mar_2008.htm
• Technology and Its Impact on How Teens are Communicating
• Internet Addiction Among Teens
• Put Their Phones Down?
• About Myspace! for Parents
• Internet Safety Tips for You and Your Kids
February, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/feb_2008.htm
• What is Anxiety?
• Anxiety Disorders
• Worry Sucks the Life out of Teens: Commentary by Susie Vanderlip
• Teens Worry About...
• Relieving Your Teen's Worries
January, 2008 http://www.legacyofhope.com/January_2008.htm
• Definition of Gossip
• Relational Aggression
• Queen Bees: Girls as Gossip Ringleaders
• Men vs. Women- Gossip Findings
• Defending Ourselves Against Gossip
• Gossip in the Workplace
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Saturday, February 9, 2008
WORRY is sucking the Life out of our Kids
Following my school assemblies, I stay on school campuses, as many of you know, for hours upon hours meeting with individual teens and groups of teens from two to fifty who often desperately want to get things off their chest. I talk to some 5,000 teens every year in grades 6 thru 12 each year in states all across the US and from every economic and cultural background to be found in our vastly diverse country. Needless to say, I get a snapshot of what is happening in the minds and hearts of our teens that I feel extraordinarily privileged to experience and equally responsible for sharing with any other adult who cares about our national treasure - our youth.
And across this diverse collection of disclosures I see two undeniable patterns in teen thinking. 1. Many, way too many, are plagued by deep sadness/grief/PTSD and 2. They worry.
When I ask teens if they worry, 99% of teens say they worry. Do they learn to worry from their parents? Many admit that their parents worry “a LOT”, and that they as teens have learned that “worrying” is what you do to manage in life. Many parents do worry a lot. And what IS worry? “Worry” is fear over something we imagine/anticipate/expect will happen in the future. What do we hope to accomplish by worrying? Perhaps it is a way of trying to protect ourselves from overwhelming emotional pain if what we fear actually happens. If we anticipate something bad happening and then worry about it, maybe it will somehow provide some method of avoiding the bad thing happening.
The funny thing is, worry in and of itself does nothing to control our future, it just steals our focus and our energy from today! We impact the future by making TODAY as good as possible – focusing our analytical skills and our energy and our efforts to making today’s activities and responsibilities as positive and successful as we can. THAT is what prepares us to handle “come what may” – because the future is truly only in the hands of forces beyond our control – for me, I like to call that God.
If teens live in a family where a spiritual approach to life is not present, then worry becomes the method of fear management. When disappointments, chaos, confusion or tragedy strike, it is difficult to make any sense of them without a belief in a Higher Power/God. It is difficult to believe there is any rhyme or reason or hope of things getting better. So, teens – parents – people WORRY.
Many teens worry because of their parents and their parents’ behaviors. I know because
thousands upon thousands of teens share with me about parents with drinking problems and the resulting chaos, unpredictability, verbal/physical/sexual abuses, and unrelenting anger they witness in their homes. Parental alcoholism often generates fierce arguments, incessant criticisms and degradation, severe financial stress and divorce within a family. All this chaos teaches the children/teens to “worry” incessantly. What will they come home to after school today? Will they be blamed for everything that happens in the household tonight? Will Dad beat up Mom again after downing his couple six packs this evening? Will Dad run around the house with a shotgun threatening the whole family when he’s loaded by midnight? Worry is often the only thing a teen knows to do to keep a grip in an unsafe insanity they have to call home. I worried, too, when I lived with an alcoholic/drug addicted husband – at least until I found help and hope in support groups for the families of alcoholics.
And then there are the high-achievers and teens from middle to upper middle class families who are in the highest level of competition with their peers for grades, AP classes, and entrance into the better universities. These teens worry extensively, too, only in their case, about meeting the expectations of their parents and the high expectations they have of themselves. They live in a highly stressful world as well where the “fear of not being loved” is usually described as a fear of failure – of not making the grade in the higher echelons of life.
Many young people learn to worry because of past pain they want to avoid in the future – usually the pain of feeling like a failure and, beneath that, the fear of not being lovable – and, in its final form, the fear of not receiving love and acceptance.
It’s easy to see how children from abusive homes can feel unloved and, though perhaps less recognized, how children from high achieving families feel unloved if they don’t perform to expectations.
Curing “worry” is a matter of healing for many teens. Healing the past traumas that linger as vivid DVD movie images in the minds of teens and that do not degrade or diminish in emotional intensity over time. Preteens through teens regularly describe to me in acute detail the memories of traumas from yesterday, or one, three, five, even 8 years ago that happened in their homes. How does a child stop “worrying” when they have post traumatic stress (PTSD)? That is what many will carry with them for a lifetime without help from therapy, support groups, self-help groups, etc.
Other teens can be helped if adults who understand the number one fear of teens – the fear of one or both parents not loving them – and who give teens a helping perspective. The behaviors of their parents are not a child’s fault! The choices of a parent are not a teen’s fault. The drinking, drug use, and abuse of a parent are not the children’s fault.
And that their parent may be sick with addiction and/or unknowingly acting out the unhealed traumas of their own childhood.
Teens from high-achievement oriented homes can be helped by parents showing their teens that they love them no matter what. By helping their teens see that there is no outcome that will keep them from loving their children. I encourage parents to reassess their expectations of their children and beware of placing their own fear of failure on the backs of their teens. See each child as an individual with special traits, skills and lovability, whether they fulfill YOUR dreams for them or not. Be an encourager, a boundary setter, a storyteller, a hugger, a helper, a dream builder, a coach - but not a
judge and jury that labels a teen “a loser,” “a slacker,” a “disappointment,” “an unworthy B----,” or many of the other unspeakable categorizations that, sadly, too many teens have heard from parents. And it is acutely clear to me that once said to a child, children/teens remember these labels for LIFE if amends and apologies are not made immediately by parents. The brain of a developing child/teen is like a sponge. And whatever a parent fills it with is absorbed, becoming a prominent part of the internal chatter of that child for life.
“Worry” sounds so innocuous but it is often symptomatic of much more emotional need in a teen than most adults may ever imagine. So, treat it as an indicator that a teen may need more compassion, patience, kindness and time with you, their parent. Teens are still quite literal. They need to hear the words, “I love you no matter what.” They need to receive hugs for their effort regardless of the result. They need to receive encouragement even as they fail to score. They also may need therapy, conversations with a social worker or school counselor, participation in support groups for such things as children of alcoholics/violence or anger management, and opportunities to find their interests, skills and new goals.
Lastly, encourage spiritual pursuits. Encourage a quiet time, a quiet mind. Encourage acts of kindness and gratitude lists. Encourage journaling and getting the emotions out on paper. And encourage prayer – even when they feel their God has forgotten them or thinks they aren’t as important or loved by God. Keep YOUR mustard seed of faith and pass it along to your kids.
And across this diverse collection of disclosures I see two undeniable patterns in teen thinking. 1. Many, way too many, are plagued by deep sadness/grief/PTSD and 2. They worry.
When I ask teens if they worry, 99% of teens say they worry. Do they learn to worry from their parents? Many admit that their parents worry “a LOT”, and that they as teens have learned that “worrying” is what you do to manage in life. Many parents do worry a lot. And what IS worry? “Worry” is fear over something we imagine/anticipate/expect will happen in the future. What do we hope to accomplish by worrying? Perhaps it is a way of trying to protect ourselves from overwhelming emotional pain if what we fear actually happens. If we anticipate something bad happening and then worry about it, maybe it will somehow provide some method of avoiding the bad thing happening.
The funny thing is, worry in and of itself does nothing to control our future, it just steals our focus and our energy from today! We impact the future by making TODAY as good as possible – focusing our analytical skills and our energy and our efforts to making today’s activities and responsibilities as positive and successful as we can. THAT is what prepares us to handle “come what may” – because the future is truly only in the hands of forces beyond our control – for me, I like to call that God.
If teens live in a family where a spiritual approach to life is not present, then worry becomes the method of fear management. When disappointments, chaos, confusion or tragedy strike, it is difficult to make any sense of them without a belief in a Higher Power/God. It is difficult to believe there is any rhyme or reason or hope of things getting better. So, teens – parents – people WORRY.
Many teens worry because of their parents and their parents’ behaviors. I know because
thousands upon thousands of teens share with me about parents with drinking problems and the resulting chaos, unpredictability, verbal/physical/sexual abuses, and unrelenting anger they witness in their homes. Parental alcoholism often generates fierce arguments, incessant criticisms and degradation, severe financial stress and divorce within a family. All this chaos teaches the children/teens to “worry” incessantly. What will they come home to after school today? Will they be blamed for everything that happens in the household tonight? Will Dad beat up Mom again after downing his couple six packs this evening? Will Dad run around the house with a shotgun threatening the whole family when he’s loaded by midnight? Worry is often the only thing a teen knows to do to keep a grip in an unsafe insanity they have to call home. I worried, too, when I lived with an alcoholic/drug addicted husband – at least until I found help and hope in support groups for the families of alcoholics.
And then there are the high-achievers and teens from middle to upper middle class families who are in the highest level of competition with their peers for grades, AP classes, and entrance into the better universities. These teens worry extensively, too, only in their case, about meeting the expectations of their parents and the high expectations they have of themselves. They live in a highly stressful world as well where the “fear of not being loved” is usually described as a fear of failure – of not making the grade in the higher echelons of life.
Many young people learn to worry because of past pain they want to avoid in the future – usually the pain of feeling like a failure and, beneath that, the fear of not being lovable – and, in its final form, the fear of not receiving love and acceptance.
It’s easy to see how children from abusive homes can feel unloved and, though perhaps less recognized, how children from high achieving families feel unloved if they don’t perform to expectations.
Curing “worry” is a matter of healing for many teens. Healing the past traumas that linger as vivid DVD movie images in the minds of teens and that do not degrade or diminish in emotional intensity over time. Preteens through teens regularly describe to me in acute detail the memories of traumas from yesterday, or one, three, five, even 8 years ago that happened in their homes. How does a child stop “worrying” when they have post traumatic stress (PTSD)? That is what many will carry with them for a lifetime without help from therapy, support groups, self-help groups, etc.
Other teens can be helped if adults who understand the number one fear of teens – the fear of one or both parents not loving them – and who give teens a helping perspective. The behaviors of their parents are not a child’s fault! The choices of a parent are not a teen’s fault. The drinking, drug use, and abuse of a parent are not the children’s fault.
And that their parent may be sick with addiction and/or unknowingly acting out the unhealed traumas of their own childhood.
Teens from high-achievement oriented homes can be helped by parents showing their teens that they love them no matter what. By helping their teens see that there is no outcome that will keep them from loving their children. I encourage parents to reassess their expectations of their children and beware of placing their own fear of failure on the backs of their teens. See each child as an individual with special traits, skills and lovability, whether they fulfill YOUR dreams for them or not. Be an encourager, a boundary setter, a storyteller, a hugger, a helper, a dream builder, a coach - but not a
judge and jury that labels a teen “a loser,” “a slacker,” a “disappointment,” “an unworthy B----,” or many of the other unspeakable categorizations that, sadly, too many teens have heard from parents. And it is acutely clear to me that once said to a child, children/teens remember these labels for LIFE if amends and apologies are not made immediately by parents. The brain of a developing child/teen is like a sponge. And whatever a parent fills it with is absorbed, becoming a prominent part of the internal chatter of that child for life.
“Worry” sounds so innocuous but it is often symptomatic of much more emotional need in a teen than most adults may ever imagine. So, treat it as an indicator that a teen may need more compassion, patience, kindness and time with you, their parent. Teens are still quite literal. They need to hear the words, “I love you no matter what.” They need to receive hugs for their effort regardless of the result. They need to receive encouragement even as they fail to score. They also may need therapy, conversations with a social worker or school counselor, participation in support groups for such things as children of alcoholics/violence or anger management, and opportunities to find their interests, skills and new goals.
Lastly, encourage spiritual pursuits. Encourage a quiet time, a quiet mind. Encourage acts of kindness and gratitude lists. Encourage journaling and getting the emotions out on paper. And encourage prayer – even when they feel their God has forgotten them or thinks they aren’t as important or loved by God. Keep YOUR mustard seed of faith and pass it along to your kids.
Labels:
assemblies,
stress,
underage drinking
Monday, November 5, 2007
New Editorial - Male Body Image Issues
This week, Legacy's intern is back with an article about Male Body Image issues, and how they are more than what they may seem.
Male Body Image - By Steve Taylor, November 5, 2007
You can read the article directly above, and you may also visit the editorials page at http://legacyofhope.com/Editorials.htm.
Male Body Image - By Steve Taylor, November 5, 2007
You can read the article directly above, and you may also visit the editorials page at http://legacyofhope.com/Editorials.htm.
Labels:
assemblies,
body image,
stress,
underage drinking
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
College Student Speaks Out - "Foibles of Teen Life Today"
LEGACY is proud of the university interns we have employed over the last 12 years. Not only do they keep us on the cutting edge of real life in the fast lane of adolescence and young adult living, but they are in sync with what's really going on with today.
We begin our NEW Editorial Page with unique and interesting perspectives from our 2007-2008 intern, Steve Taylor, Chapman University student and Business Major:
Steroids for Students: How ADD medication is changing study habits - By Steve Taylor, September 25, 2007
The Travesty of Technology: Because texting is so much easier than talking - By Steve Taylor, September 23, 2007
You can read all the latest articles by visiting http://legacyofhope.com/Editorials.htm, and we welcome your comments and remarks below!
We begin our NEW Editorial Page with unique and interesting perspectives from our 2007-2008 intern, Steve Taylor, Chapman University student and Business Major:
Steroids for Students: How ADD medication is changing study habits - By Steve Taylor, September 25, 2007
The Travesty of Technology: Because texting is so much easier than talking - By Steve Taylor, September 23, 2007
You can read all the latest articles by visiting http://legacyofhope.com/Editorials.htm, and we welcome your comments and remarks below!
Labels:
assemblies,
college freshman,
stress,
underage drinking
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Burnt Out, Stressed Out, and Pilled Up!
Everywhere I turn this new school year, school counselors, teachers, parents and teens are telling me they’re OVERWHELMED, feeling depressed, spewing inappropriate anger and rage, and dissatisfied with their lives. It’s STRESS –a world of excessive - I mean EXCESSIVE – Expectations… High-achievers have parents breathing down their necks for every mistake and imperfection.
“You’ll be handling the Jr’s and Sr’s this semester including scheduling, college applications, and 10 other essential administrative activities,” declare administrators to counselors who work hours of unpaid overtime to listen to teen problems because no time is available during the school day.
“Now, don’t stress-out in my class,” a teacher kindly chides her students, then assigns two-hours of homework every night, drops a daily spot quiz on them and 5 major exams throughout the semester.
And then there are the incessant text messages from friends that have to be responded to as well as the required 3 extra-curricular activities and volunteer hours each week in order to be competitive on college applications.
Too many expectations with no room to make mistakes, to try and to fail and to try again, to know we are loved not because of what we DO but because we ARE.
We are not Human Doings, my friends, we are Human Beings! We don’t have to be perfect – we don’t have to get into the best university – to be loved! We might actually be HAPPY and find fulfillment from our losses and our imperfections – from going to a second tier college with less stress and more personal attention and personal growth.
I had a call just this week from a school counselor who was at her wits end, stressed to the extreme, because the students at her magnet Advanced Placement high school were too stressed, and cheating. She wanted stress management education for her students, and then she determined maybe better for the teachers and let them disseminate the information. Good call.
What was of greatest concern to me was that the school absolutely did NOT want to have the focus of stress management on alcohol and drug use or sexuality or violence because, well, this was about “STRESS MANAGEMENT”. I have no problem providing stress management training for the body, the mind and the spirit – finding life balance within self-awareness, self-care, and self-nurturance in all these areas. That is my and my husband’s area of expertise. However, how can we look at stress management without looking at how we cope with pressure and emotions in our lives? And how many parents, from low-education/low-income to highest achieving, model chemical coping – alcohol, painkillers, pot, cocaine, methamphetamines, valium, Vicodan, Oxycontin and more to manage the fears and failures of normal every day living?
Stress is the great catalyst to choice! Because STRESS is the 6-letter cover-up for so many uncomfortable feelings including a great fear of failure, fear of inadequacy, and fear of not being loved.
I’ll be exploring this perspective in greater detail this year and including CHOICES that are critical to our sense of well-being, fulfillment and joy in life.
All achievement and no play makes for a depressed teen/adult!
“You won’t get into the top colleges if you aren’t at the top of your class!” exhort pushing parents.
“You’ll be handling the Jr’s and Sr’s this semester including scheduling, college applications, and 10 other essential administrative activities,” declare administrators to counselors who work hours of unpaid overtime to listen to teen problems because no time is available during the school day.
“Now, don’t stress-out in my class,” a teacher kindly chides her students, then assigns two-hours of homework every night, drops a daily spot quiz on them and 5 major exams throughout the semester.
And then there are the incessant text messages from friends that have to be responded to as well as the required 3 extra-curricular activities and volunteer hours each week in order to be competitive on college applications.
Too many expectations with no room to make mistakes, to try and to fail and to try again, to know we are loved not because of what we DO but because we ARE.
We are not Human Doings, my friends, we are Human Beings! We don’t have to be perfect – we don’t have to get into the best university – to be loved! We might actually be HAPPY and find fulfillment from our losses and our imperfections – from going to a second tier college with less stress and more personal attention and personal growth.
I had a call just this week from a school counselor who was at her wits end, stressed to the extreme, because the students at her magnet Advanced Placement high school were too stressed, and cheating. She wanted stress management education for her students, and then she determined maybe better for the teachers and let them disseminate the information. Good call.
What was of greatest concern to me was that the school absolutely did NOT want to have the focus of stress management on alcohol and drug use or sexuality or violence because, well, this was about “STRESS MANAGEMENT”. I have no problem providing stress management training for the body, the mind and the spirit – finding life balance within self-awareness, self-care, and self-nurturance in all these areas. That is my and my husband’s area of expertise. However, how can we look at stress management without looking at how we cope with pressure and emotions in our lives? And how many parents, from low-education/low-income to highest achieving, model chemical coping – alcohol, painkillers, pot, cocaine, methamphetamines, valium, Vicodan, Oxycontin and more to manage the fears and failures of normal every day living?
Stress is the great catalyst to choice! Because STRESS is the 6-letter cover-up for so many uncomfortable feelings including a great fear of failure, fear of inadequacy, and fear of not being loved.
I’ll be exploring this perspective in greater detail this year and including CHOICES that are critical to our sense of well-being, fulfillment and joy in life.
All achievement and no play makes for a depressed teen/adult!
Labels:
assemblies,
stress,
underage drinking
Thursday, August 2, 2007
Check out my FOX NEWS LIVE INTERVIEW!
June 22, 2007 - FOX NEWS LIVE interviewed me as a youth and family issues expert regarding a 16 yr-old girl marrying her 40-yr-old track coach --- Whoa, let's think about this one! Not what every parent dreams of for their daughter's future, I am sure!
What do you think of that?
http://www.legacyofhope.com/RealMedia/Fox%20News%20Live%20Clip/Fox%20News%20Live%206-22-07%20SV%20Interview.wmv
What do you think of that?
http://www.legacyofhope.com/RealMedia/Fox%20News%20Live%20Clip/Fox%20News%20Live%206-22-07%20SV%20Interview.wmv
Labels:
assemblies,
Family,
Fox News live,
stress,
Susie Vanderlip,
Teen expert,
underage drinking
Sharing my good news!
I am thrilled to share with my fans, family and friends about receiving the National Speakers Association CPAE Award and being inducted into the Speaker Hall of Fame!
What a fantastic evening it was! As always, "Julio" - my gangbanger character - came out first to try to claim the prize, and then "he" stripped down to reveal me in my elegant white gown!
What a fantastic evening it was! As always, "Julio" - my gangbanger character - came out first to try to claim the prize, and then "he" stripped down to reveal me in my elegant white gown!

AWESOME!
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