
On the heels of Jonathan Haidt’s book, The Anxious Generation, comes another well-researched examination of Gen Z and its difficulties: Abigail Shrier’s Bad Therapy – Why The Kids Aren’t Growing Up (although I like my Who reference better for a subtitle!). Like Haidt, Shrier is concerned with the mental health of Gen Z (born 1995 – 2012). But where Haidt lays the blame on too much time on smartphones and not enough time in unsupervised play, Shrier takes aim at the enormous and exponentially growing therapy industry.
Bad Therapy is divided into three parts: Healers Can Harm, Therapy Goes Airborne, and Maybe There’s Nothing Wrong With Our Kids. As she asks in the Introduction, “How did the first generation to raise kids without spanking produce the first generation to declare they never wanted kids of their own? How did kids raised so gently come to believe that they had experienced debilitating childhood trauma? How did kids who received far more psycho-therapy than any previous generation plunge into a bottomless well of despair?” (page xvii) Bad Therapy is Shrier’s attempt to provide answers to these questions.
Part I: Healers Can Harm begins with a chapter on iatrogenesis, which refers to “the phenomenon of a healer harming a patient in the course of treatment”. As Shrier points out, therapists have a built-in conflict of interest: since they are their patients’ treatment, any acknowledgment of ineffectiveness is an acknowledgement of personal failure. To make matters worse, the most common treatments really have no track record of success. Treating trauma victims by having them discuss and rehash their trauma is more likely to be counterproductive than helpful.
Also, it is a prevailing belief among many therapists that Gen Z uniquely faces an unprecedented combination of stressors, the main three of which are smartphones, COVID-19 lockdowns, and climate change. Shrier recounts a humorous exchange with Karla Vermuelen, an associate professor of psychology at State University of NY at New Paltz and author of Generation Disaster: Coming of Age Post-9/11:
“I ask Vermeulen if it would ever be appropriate to say to a kid, Listen, you’re really exaggerating the threat of climate change right now. Let’s get through the week.
Vermeulen looks visibly stricken. ‘I would never tell someone they’re exaggerating. That’s very invalidating and not helpful. That’s going to raise defenses and make them feel unheard.'” (p. 30)
Later in the book, Shrier mentions that of all the children and adolscents she interviewed for the book, not one blamed climate change for his or her emotional issues.
In Chapter 3, Bad Therapy, Shrier goes through ten modes of therapy that can be harmful:
- Teach Kids to Pay Close Attention to their Feelings
- Induce Rumination
- Make “Happiness” a Goal but Reward Emotional Suffering
- Affirm and Accommodate Kids’ Worries
- Monitor, Monitor, Monitor
- Dispense Diagnoses Liberally
- Drug ‘Em
- Encourage Kids to Share Their “Trauma”
- Encourage Young Adults to Break Contact with “Toxic” Family
- Create Treatment Dependency
Part II, Theory Goes Airborne, is the longest section and the most interesting, as it deals with how schools have adopted a therapeutic mindset towards their students. Shrier catalogs all kinds of abuses schools inflict in the name of “social-emotional learning”, “restorative justice”, and other trendy educational theories.
Through prompts and exercises, social-emotional learning (SEL) pushes kids toward a series of personal reflections, aimed at teaching them “self-awareness”, “social awareness”, “relationship skills”, “self-management”, and “responsible decision-making”. (p. 77)
On its face SEL, doesn’t sound harmful, except that psychologists have long understood that the more you ask kids to assess their feelings, the more they focus on negative and narcissistic things, and less on actual learning.
Even more troubling is the use of surveys and assignments that undermine a child’s relationship with his or her family. Here’s an example of a seventh grade assignment, titled Homework: I Spy:
“You are a private investigator”, it prompts. “You have been hired by an unnamed source to ‘spy’ on your family. The source wants to find out all the various feelings that one or more of your family members have while doing activities at home. You won’t be able to talk to your family (you don’t want to blow your cover!) so you’ll have use your keen skills of observation.” (p. 85)
What educational benefit an assignment like this can possibly have is beyond me. I can, however, think of lots of ways it could be used to destroy a family’s cohesion.
A lot of what Shrier discovers is counter-intuitive. For example, focusing on empathy to the exclusion of other virtues can lead to students treating each other horribly. How?
Empathy invariably involves a choice of whose feelings to coronate and whose to disregard. Overreliance on empathy as a guide to mediating human affairs leads to precisely the injustices we see today in schools: phony show trials allegedly in defense of marginalized students, alongside breathtaking cruelty to undesirables. Empathy supplies a narrow aperture of intense caring. Those outside it blur into nothing. (p. 160)
What happens when a community is consumed with adhering to the latest of ever-changing standards of propriety? Members file away potential violations committed by others as an escape route:
One mom, Ellen, who consults to private school parents, apprised me of a bizarre and chilling trend among the rising generation. Many teens maintain a cache of screenshots to incriminate their friends just in case they should need to retailate against an accuser. (p. 161)
In Chapter 9, The Road Paved By Gentle Parents, Shrier is particularly harsh. Its thesis is that, beginning in the 1990s, parents ceded their authority and personal experience to parenting “experts” who all counseled a parenting style that was “gentle” – treating your child as an equal and using reason to modify bad behavior, as opposed to setting rules and boundaries and imposing consequences. The result has been a generation of children who are holy terrors, physically attacking their parents and making ever-increasing demands from them.
Shrier doesn’t pull any punches here:
Want to know why the rising generation of kids doesn’t want to have kids of their own? It’s because we made parenting look so damn miserable. It’s because we listened to all the experts and convinced ourselves that we couldn’t possible appeal to life experience, judgment, knowledge gleaned over decades – tens of thousands of hours with our kids – or what our parents had done, and figure this thing out for ourselves. It’s because forty-year-old parents – accomplished, brilliant, and blessed with a spouse – treat the raising of kids like a calculus problem that was put to them in the dead of night, gun to the head: Get it right or I pull this trigger.
We played a part with our kids: the therapeutic parent. We let them throw food on the floor and kick us and hit us – and each time extended them more understanding. We offered them an endless array of choices. And we absolutely renounced our own authority.
And it scared them. It scared these kids so badly. Look at them. They know there’s no one running the place. They know they’re far too young to be exercising the amount of power we’ve handed them. They know that if they’ve brought their towering father, an accomplished man in his forties, to his knees, clueless and despairing – then something has gone desperately wrong. (p. 190)
Part III: Maybe There’s Nothing Wrong With Our Kids is a call to parents to reclaim their authority. Shrier’s main point is that no one knows a child better than his or her parent, and when parents show fear and anxiety, kids pick up on it.
This section also overlaps with Haidt’s call to give children the freedom to take risks and grow independent. Shrier uses Japanese and Israeli families as examples – both countries give very young (by our standards) children responsibilities and freedom. In Israel, it is expected that 8-year-olds get themselves to school. It is Shrier’s contention that many children diagnosed with ADHD can be helped if their parents give them specific chores to complete, and hold them responsible if they lose things. Just like Haidt says, children will only grow into competent adults if they are allowed to make mistakes and learn how to play with other children on their own, without adult supervision. “When kids miss their “window” of independence – of wanting to hazard a risk and venture something new on their own – they stop asking for it.” (p. 218)
Bad Therapy is a powerful call to parents to resist the diagnoses and therapeutic approach of experts, remember that their parents raised them without all the meds and therapy, and they turned out okay. Parenting is not a job that requires extensive training and advice. It’s a calling that each one of us is capable of doing, as long as we understand that every child is a unique person with his or her own quirks and strengths. “In all but the direst circumstances, your child will benefit immeasurably from knowing you are in charge – and that you don’t think there’s something wrong with her.” (p. 247)