Earlier in her career, she recalls, the agony may have been a bullying situation or an issue at home that would propel a young congregant to seek her help.
“Now it’s this generalized feeling of 'I want out. I don’t feel like this world is a good place to be'," Timoner continues. “So many of the things we once counted on are not reliable anymore, like democracy, like justice, like public health, like the future of the Earth itself. If you’re a teenager in 2022, you’re genuinely worried that we’re heading toward mass extinction. The problems now are all-encompassing.”
“I think the main thing for parents and grandparents to know is that to love is not to worry. But rather to have rock-solid faith in your children and to express that. When we see our kids suffering or struggling, what they need to hear is, ''I believe in you.' They might not believe in themselves, but knowing 'we’ll get through this together' really makes an impact.”
What I learned about kids at summer camp
For 23 years, Gabe Chernov has been the director of Camp Birch Trail in Thiensville, Wisconsin. As he puts it, “I thought I’d seen in all.” That feeling has dramatically changed as recent summers have shown him dramatic shifts in his campers’ mental health.
“The last two years have definitely seen an uptick as far as anxiety, depression, things like eating disorders, and the feeling that kids are under enormous pressure,” Chernov starts out. “People point to social media and smartphones as the cause, and that’s definitely part of it — the fear of missing out, having everything documented in real time, getting your validations from ‘likes'." But we don’t allow phones or electronics at camp, and I still see a much higher level of agitation.”
He cites a rise in sleeping problems, with kids unable to shut off worries about a troubled outside world and relax into the camp world of play.
“I think they just can’t turn their brains off, whether it relates to war in Ukraine, climate change, or whatever’s going on politically. Comparatively speaking, ... what earlier camp groups went through the last couple decades — it was a pretty decent time for childhood and adolescence. For these guys, it’s a lot tougher. Kids missing out on proms, on graduation ceremonies, on an entire freshman year of college and then some.”
Despite the hardships they face, this camp director says he is hopeful that learning how to navigate really hard obstacles will instill resilience and grit that will prepare this generation of youth well for adulthood.
“I see them bouncing back already, and they’ve adapted in ways nobody could have predicted," he adds. “My intuition is that this generation of adolescents will become great problem solvers and very nimble when it comes to change. They’ve been through so much, and that’s bound to shape who they’re going to become.”