Parenting teenagers can feel like you’re constantly firefighting – school anxiety, exam stress, messy bedrooms, emotional blow-ups – we want to say this clearly:
You’re not failing. This stage really is tough.
At Make (Good) Trouble, one thing we hear again and again from parents is:
“I don’t know what’s normal anymore, and I don’t know if I’m handling this right.”
You’re not alone in that feeling.
In this Q&A, Daisy Cresswell spoke with psychotherapist Donna Peters-Lamb about young people’s mental health, parenting teenagers – and what genuinely helps families day to day. Here are the most useful takeaways
When school feels like too much
For many families, anxiety shows up as the Monday morning battle – tears, shutdown, refusal, or a child who simply can’t get out of the door.
One reassuring truth: anxiety rarely comes out of nowhere. It builds quietly over time and is often a response to feeling overwhelmed or unsafe.
What helps (without making it worse)
Get curious, not alarmed
Instead of focusing only on “school is the problem”, try gently exploring:
- When did this start?
- What feels hardest?
- When does school feel even a little bit easier?
Sometimes the clue to moving forward is hidden in the detail.
Bring school in early
You don’t need to wait for things to fall apart. A discreet conversation with a tutor or Head of Year can help you understand what’s really going on – friendships, learning pressure, or moments where your child is coping better than you realise.
Prepare before pressure hits
Anxious brains hate uncertainty. Simple preparation can make a big difference:
- Pack school bags on Friday
- Check homework earlier in the weekend
- Talk through the week ahead
Less last-minute stress = calmer mornings.
Tools that actually calm anxiety
Anxiety lives in the body, not just in thoughts. These tools help switch off the stress response – and teenagers (and parents) can use them anywhere.
Breathing (simple and invisible)
- 3–4–5 breathing: in for 3, hold for 4, out for 5
- Or any breathing where the out-breath is longer than the in-breath
This tells the nervous system it’s safe to calm down.
Grounding
Encourage your teen to:
- Feel their feet flat on the floor
- Notice colours, sounds, or objects around them
- Focus attention outward instead of inward
These techniques are subtle, practical, and effective anywhere – in classrooms,
“They don’t listen to me”: Mess, conflict and power struggles
If you’re endlessly asking for dirty washing, mugs and plates from their room – and getting nowhere – you’re not alone.
A helpful reframe: this is rarely about disrespect. Teenagers genuinely don’t notice mess in the way adults do.
What helps families move forward
Say it once – properly
Instead of repeated nagging, have one calm conversation about:
- What matters to you
- What you expect
- What will happen if it doesn’t change
Start small
Ask for one thing at a time:
- This week: dirty clothes in the basket
- Next step: cups and bowls returned
Small steps are more achievable – and more likely to stick.
Consequences, not punishments
Be clear and upfront:
“If this doesn’t happen, this is what will follow. I don’t want that – but it’s your choice.”
This removes power struggles and reduces emotional blow-ups.
Exam stress and the harsh inner critic
Even when exams are over, many young people stay stuck in worry – replaying papers and assuming the worst.
Psychotherapist Donna Peters-Lamb shared a powerful idea from psychologist Martin Seligman, known as the Three Ps.
When stressed, young people often make worries:
- Personal: “This proves I’m a failure”
- Pervasive: “I mess everything up”
- Permanent: “I’ll always be like this”
📚 Read this: Learned Optimism: How to change your mind and your life by Martin Seligman
How parents can help
Rather than jumping in with “You’ll be fine”, try gently challenging certainty:
- “You don’t actually know that yet.”
- “That’s a thought, not a fact.”
- “Even if this didn’t go how you hoped, there are other paths.”
This isn’t fake positivity. It’s helping young people build flexible thinking – a key life skill.
A few things to remember about parenting teenagers
- Teen brains are still under construction
- Behaviour is often communication
- Anxiety needs calming, not fixing
- Routines, sleep and connection matter more than lectures
- Your stress level affects your child more than you realise
And most importantly:
Be kind to yourself.
Parenting teenagers is one of the hardest, most emotionally demanding jobs there is – and you don’t have to do it perfectly to do it well.
At Make Good Trouble, we exist to support parents and carers too. You don’t have to hold all of this on your own.
Want support that feels human?
If this resonates, you might find it helpful to:
- Sign up for our Raising Teens workshop pilot
- Follow us for practical tools and honest conversations
- Share this post with another parent who might need it
💛 You’re not alone. And you’re doing better than you think.
Huge thanks to Donna for her time and invaluable advice. You can find out more about her at Make Sense Psychotherapy.
Watch the whole conversation here:
