
Sometimes when we picture anxiety, we picture a worried face, maybe a nervous stomach, or someone visibly on edge. In teens, those may be present but it can also often show up differently.
Common signs that are easy to misread:
Irritability and anger: An anxious teen is often a snappy teen. When the nervous system is on high alert, it doesn’t always produce tears openly. Rather, it can produce a short fuse.
You don’t need to see all of these to be concerned. A clear change in your teen from what was normal for them is the most important signal that something may be wrong.
1. Start with listening, not fixing
When your teen opens up, even a little — resist the urge to immediately solve. “Have you tried…?” is almost always the wrong first response because chances are they either have tried that or they just need you to validate their experience and how difficult it is for them. Try: “That sounds really hard. Tell me more.” Teens who feel truly heard and not judged are far more likely to keep talking.
2. Don’t minimize it
“You have no reason to be anxious” or “Other kids have it way worse” will shut down the conversation instantly. Their anxiety is real, whether you fully understand it or the cause seems proportional or not. Meet your teen right where they’re at.
3. Normalize getting help
Some teens resist therapy because they think it means something is wrong with them. Reframe it and encourage them that nothing is wrong with them. Normalize how many people feel anxious. This could sound like: “Therapy is a way for you to have a safe space to talk with someone outside of us (your parents) and get help so you can stop feeling so much anxiety. It’s for learning skills and tools, the same way you might work with a tutor for math or a trainer for sports.”
Consider reaching out to a therapist if:
A therapist can give your teen tools they don’t have yet and give you guidance on how to support them best at home.
In my practice, I see teens (13+) for anxiety, depression, stress, and a range of other concerns. My approach is warm and practical because teens need to feel like they’re being treated as the whole person they are, not like a problem to be solved. I prioritize getting to know them and their likes/dislikes as well as working through the presenting issues. I use Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Solution Focused Therapy, mindfulness-based tools, attachment-informed work and other therapeutic techniques, tailored to each teen.
I also partner with parents as appropriate. Teens need both privacy in therapy and a family system that supports what they’re working on. Getting that balance right is part of the work
If you’re in Allen, Plano, McKinney, or anywhere in Texas and you’re wondering whether therapy might help your teen, I’d be glad to talk. Please reach out so we can determine if we’re a good fit and I can provide next steps. Simply reach out here to get started.
5/04/2026
Catherine is a licensed therapist, coach, and advocate for all things holistic living. Her blog is designed to offer resources that people can use to go from surviving to thriving.
I'd love to connect with you: @catherine.n.solomon
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