Loneliness In Adolescents
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Loneliness In Adolescents

Adolescence is an age where the changes are taking place very quickly. These changes take place physically and emotionally and both go hand in hand. Children become extremely conscious of the changes, and this may have a deep impact on their confidence and self esteem.

Some children, who struggle with external problems related to physical appearance, are the most affected ones. They seem to be withdrawn due to the changing skin conditions and also feel lonely. A child at this age may feel lonely mainly due to the physical changes. Not all children are emotionally strong to deal with such rapid changes. At this age especially, they need counseling and proper guidance from parents. If a child is not attractive, then they will not have too many friends at school. For an adolescent child, friends are everything, and not having any of them could leave them all alone.

A lonely child is a sad child. Parents should understand this and help them out. At this age, parents are not on the friends list, and children do not like to share everything with parents. They need friends more than anything.

Also, one should understand the difference between being alone and loneliness. Loneliness is a situation where the child is feeling left out and is depressed. Loneliness is not the same, and here the child may not be depressed or unhappy necessarily. By nature, the child could be an aloof and reserved person. You should know the difference before you approach the child. A person, who is alone, will behave normally, but a lonely child will clearly be withdrawn and will be always depressed.

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Loneliness In Adolescents

 

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Neurological-Disorders-In-Adolescents      Are adolescents likely to develop neurological disorders? It is highly unlikely unless they hurt themselves badly on their heads or were in a traumatic incident, or if they had some problem from childhood. Neurological disorders usually surface in a baby stage itself. Parents will come to know of it or may experience an early signal ninety nine percent of the time. A new problem is not likely to develop in adolescence. More..

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