Vacations & Weekends
It would be so easy to let everything drop during vacations and weekends.
Your teen would probably love to stay in their room playing online games (or is that just my child?). For kids who are anxious, their rooms are their safe place to retreat or hide from the world. It’s hard for them to get out – it feels risky. But kids who have anxiety need to take some of those risks.
Every day you can nudge your teen to take risks. This is highly dependent on your teen’s needs. If your kid is socially anxious, nudge him to talk to someone or go to the grocery store. If your teen resists exercise, encourage her to go for a walk. (Bonus points when she’s outdoors!)
- Is it one more thing you need to do? Yes.
- Is it worth the arguments and tears? I think so.
The goal of this isn’t to be more social or get exercise, the point is for your teen to learn that they can do the things that are hard and they’ll be ok. You will be helping them work toward the skill of being comfortable with feeling uncomfortable. Take tiny steps and expect push-back at first. If it’s too much, doesn’t work out, that’s ok. Start over again the next day with something else.
I have 2 approaches I use for this with my teens. If it is a bigger thing, like getting exercise or leaving the house for an activity, I try to get it done earlier in the day. In my experience the longer they are on their screens, the harder it is to shift to a different activity. I also look for what I call an “add-on” throughout the day, where I ask my teen to do just one more small thing. If we go grocery shopping, I ask her to return the cart. If we go to Target, I might say I have to go to the bathroom so that he has to navigate the store without me for a few minutes.
When our teens don’t want to go to school, and we struggle with them for months, perhaps years, every single school day. And I am suggesting you continue to push them. You might be thinking “You’re crazy! She needs and break and so do I!” Yes. And steps your teen takes throughout the rest of the year, including vacations, toward taking risks and being more independent will help them. It will help during vacations, and it just might help for the following school year.


