Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Why Do Teens Take Risks? A Parenting Expert Says It's All In Their Heads

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2016 10:34 AM
    CALGARY — We've all got one — a story from our teenage years about a risky decision that we look back on with a mixture of pride and dread at the thought of what could have happened had something gone wrong.
     
    The deaths of 17-year-old twin brothers who police say scaled a fence with six other friends to toboggan down an icy bobsled track in Calgary has raised the question of why do young people take such risks?
     
    The answer, says Toronto-based family therapist and author Alyson Schafer, lies in part of the teenage brain.
     
    A number of studies, including one from the National Institutes of Health in the United States and another from the American College of Pediatricians, point to teenage brains still being under construction.
     
    The early adolescent brain has higher levels of dopamine — the hormone most responsible for feelings of pleasure — in the prefrontal cortex, but decreasing dopamine levels in the reward centre of the brain.
     
    The low levels of dopamine in the reward centre suggest a teen requires more excitement and stimulation to achieve pleasure than an adult.
     
    So a teenager will attempt riskier behaviours, Schafer says.
     
    "What we have seen is the teen brain is actually wired evolutionarily to take risk and to excitement seek. It's sort of a Darwinian thing that says this is the age as a species you are asking the approaching adult to leave the security of the family social unit and to venture out — basically flock from the nest," she says.
     
     
     
    "I'm sure every parent can probably dig back in their memory and think of something where they go: 'There but for the grace of God go I, if I would have gone two miles an hour faster or didn't stop three seconds earlier," she said.
     
    "We've all done boneheaded things and survived. This is just one of those cases where it didn't work out."
     
    Schafer says teens are good at recognizing risks in their actions, but often take part anyway. Add in peer pressure and there's a problem.
     
    "I bet those eight teens made a different decision than if one teen went up their alone."
     
    Schafer advises parents to try to find activities for their kids that involve the feeling of risk without the danger, such as sports or public performance.
     
    The superintendent of Westmount Charter School where twins Jordan and Evan Caldwell attended, says he hopes that students will learn from this sad event.
     
    "It's important for us to remember that the students involved in this event are teenagers. They make some decisions about the kind of activities they want to get involved in. Sometimes it will be a bad decision which can lead to a tragic ending," says Joe Frank.
     
    "I think we need to have our students as much as possible think it can happen to anybody — it can happen to them."

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats
    MCBRIDE, B.C. — A small community in British Columbia's central Interior says it plans to press charges once police identify an anonymous caller who allegedly threatened the mayor.

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn
    When it comes to watching porn online, women are slowly bridging the gap in India with as much as 30 percent of women in India now regularly visiting porn websites

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates
    Researchers at Simon Fraser University surveyed a group of Vancouver high school students and got the results which oppose earlier assumptions about bullies.

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones
    People with higher levels of the reproductive hormone testosterone and the stress hormone cortisol are more likely to repeatedly engage in cheating and other unethical behaviour, a new study suggests.

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat
    Grandparents are often extremely fond of their grandchildren but a study says that affection from grandparents may lead to childhood obesity.

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat

    Who’s Calling The Shots in Surrey?

    Who’s Calling The Shots in Surrey?
    An alarming number of shootings has officials, politicians and residents alike, pleading for the violence to stop before more lives are lost. While there may not be any easy solutions to ending the current criminal activity, it’s evident that something needs to change before the city feels safe once again.

    Who’s Calling The Shots in Surrey?