1 / 22

The ‘Unrevealed’ Adolescent Mind

The ‘Unrevealed’ Adolescent Mind. Sailesh Gupta, Mumbai Secretary General, IAP. Agam’s regret. Agam - a car thief, at 15 Went to Jail at 16 Emerged 6 mo later and knocked down a pedestrian with a stolen vehicle Jailed for 7 years. Emerged from Jail at 25, ‘criminalized’

navid
Download Presentation

The ‘Unrevealed’ Adolescent Mind

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The ‘Unrevealed’ Adolescent Mind Sailesh Gupta, Mumbai Secretary General, IAP

  2. Agam’s regret • Agam - a car thief, at 15 • Went to Jail at 16 • Emerged 6 mo later and knocked down a pedestrian with a stolen vehicle • Jailed for 7 years. • Emerged from Jail at 25, ‘criminalized’ • Shot fatally while getting away from a bank heist • He wondered as he lay dying, why did I cultivate such friends in life ? !

  3. Sasha’s lament • Born in a conservative family • Found college life exciting • Eloped with neighbor, 10 years her senior • Disowned by family • Was an unwed mother at 17 • Soon abandoned by her man • Landed up in a bar as dancer • Her child died at 6 mo from dehydration • Alone, she cried aloud, what have I done to my life ?

  4. A Typical Adolescent • Peak of physical development • Sexual urge • Need for independence and self expression • Impulsiveness • Immature self control • Self consciousness • Desire for peer acceptance • Idealism, depression, suicidal tendency • Anxiety about life goals • Sleep deprived • Risky behaviors • Substance abuse • Antisocial activities • Emotional vulnerability

  5. Why are Teens a puzzle ?

  6. Development of the Adolescent Mind • Striking changes in human brain during adolescence • Grey matter of childhood brain thins out in adolescence • Synapses are pruned away and refined • Myelination increases: speed of neuronal transmission increases • Various brain structures mature differentially • Complete maturation is achieved around age 25 • Brain development affected by genetics, hormones, environment, experiences, drugs

  7. Differential brain maturation in adolescence • Lower brain structures, the amygdala, very active (heightened emotions and impulsiveness, reward systems well developed) • Higher centers, the frontal lobe and prefrontal cortex, still maturing (self control, abstract thought) (Neurological Gap !) • Experience + environment + genetic programming = brain maturation = future abilities + behavior • Adolescent brain literally shaped by experiences

  8. Clinical Application

  9. Adolescent brain development explains clinical behavior • Reward chasing behavior with disregard for risks and consequences • Differential development of brain structures = exploratory behavior, experimentation with tobacco, alcohol, illegal substances, addictions, risky sex, mental illness, depression, delinquency • Keenness to learn, excel, acquire, and lead • Emotions overrule logic; errors of judgment • Psychoactive substance abuse alters neurotransmitter action = sense of reward, habit formation, addiction, and dependence; over time, blunts perception of rewards of social interactions

  10. The Paradox of Adolescence • Sharpened ability to imbibe and learn • Right learning (language, music, the arts etc.) causes long term potentiation • Girls brains mature faster than boys = ready for challenges at earlier ages VS. • Brain vulnerable to external stimuli, like alcohol, drugs, and traumatic experiences • Sleep deprivation = poor cognition, bad performance, anger, depression, delinquency • Sensory overload prevents focused learning, impairs concentration and long term memory

  11. Teen Parenting

  12. Knowledge Utilized for Parenting of Adolescents • Critical Period of development – need reassurance and emotional support • Blossoming brain – help the teen ‘use’ and not ‘lose’ the opportunity to shape it • Duality of adolescent thought – accept it and guide it • Self centered – I am the Universe • Teen tantrums – not a personal affront to parents; be calm

  13. Knowledge Utilized for Parenting of Adolescents • Intense emotions – good intentions are misunderstood • Not enough sleep – affects cognition • Peer pressure, peer pleasure – ‘fitting in’ vs. learning new skills • Risk taking – involved parenting; limit the risks • Parents are important – be good listeners, stress busters, role models

  14. A Peep for Parents into the ‘unrevealed’ adolescent mind

  15. 5 Secrets for Parents • SECRET 1 – Teens want PARENTS to KNOW them • SECRET 2 – Teens need outlets for EMOTIONS • SECRET 3 – Teens like practical and SOCIAL aspects of institutions • SECRET 4 – Teens have POOR TIME MANAGEMENT skills • SECRET 5 - PEER pressure can TROUBLE teens

  16. Parents are More Relevant than Peers PARENTS CAN UNIQUELY OFFER TO A TEEN – • Unconditional Acceptance • A sense of Personal worth • Wisdom of the World • Experience of all years lived • Quality Time

  17. What do Teens really want ?

  18. 2013 list of Teen wishes reveal the adolescent mind • Hate Justin Bieber on social networking • Becoming Tumblr famous (collecting crazy pictures) • Smoking cigarettes • Idolizing Miley Cyrus • Carrying iPhone to school • Online pornography • Instagramming pictures • Blogging • Accusing parents of being ‘uncool’ • Uploading videos of themselves doing mundane things • Waiting for release of album of favorite music group • Adding likes on social networking • Ordering sex toys online

  19. PartingThought • Considering that development of adolescent brain continues until the age of 25, maybe we need to have separate prisons for the young adult group (18 to 25 years old), away from the world of mature adults

More Related