On the Path to Bravery
Teens
spend a great deal of time and energy trying to look tough.
My father and his buddies wore blue jeans, white tee-shirts,
and they slicked their hair back to adopt a menacing
appearance. As blue jeans became commonplace for both boys
and girls, my generation acted out with gigantic hair and
black eye-liner. Boys pierced their ears. We were cool until
the next generation came along with the "goth"
look of china-white skin, black lips, nails, and hair, and
all manners of chains and spikes protruding from clothing
and shoes. Now, those kids were tough! To frighten old folks
today, the youngsters wear their pants sagging with boxers
in plain sight and their expensive NFL team shirts give rise
to questions about where folks that age got that kind of
money. In any event, it’s their attempt to look tough, to
look cool, to seem ferocious.
Why is it that each new generation on the
scene feels this compulsion to look scary? It’s because
they are so scared themselves. Growing up is terrifying.
Becoming an adult is one of the most difficult things we
ever have to do, and we generally have to do it long before
we want to, long before we’re ready to, so we’re scared,
and in an effort to hide our fears, we instead, hide behind
a frightening visage designed to keep others at bay
So, if wearing scary clothing can be a
sign of fear, what behaviors illustrate bravery? Oddly
enough, living life without the aid of chemicals is one of
the bravest things a kid today can do, and yet, those that
choose that path are often taunted as sissies. It’s
actually quite the opposite.
To deal with the broken heart that comes
when your best friend steals your girl, it takes far more
stones to live through that experience sober than it does
high. When all the practice you and your dad did over the
summer didn’t help and you still didn’t make the
football team, going to the games to cheer on the players
rather than retreating to drunken parties takes as much
bravery as it does to walk onto the football field. When
algebra confuses you, it takes courage to ask the teacher or
a fellow student for help. The coward just gets high and
flunks the class.
This month, celebrate all the brave kids
and teenagers that you know that are facing their uncertain
future bravely, soberly, without the aid of harmful,
addictive chemicals. Let them know that you see them as the
courageous heroes they are, and not as the fearful
"goodie-two-shoes" that drunken bullies portray
them to be. Empathize with them about how scary adult life
can be, and show them through your role modeling how to meet
it head-on, without poisoning your body or your future with
drugs, alcohol, or destructive behavior addictions like
gambling or overspending.
It’s really important to let teens know
we honor their abstaining from destructive life choices or
they may begin to try out other options. If they’re on the
path of bravery, make sure they know you see them there!