After more than a decade of stability or improvement, the mental health of adolescents plunged in the early 2010s. Rates of depression, anxiety, self-harm, and suicide rose sharply, more than doubling on many measures. Why?
In The Anxious Generation, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt lays out the facts about the epidemic of teen mental illness that hit many countries at the same time. He then investigates the nature of childhood, including why children need play and independent exploration to mature into competent, thriving adults. Haidt shows how the “play-based childhood” began to decline in the 1980s, and how it was finally wiped out by the arrival of the “phone-based childhood” in the early 2010s. He presents more than a dozen mechanisms by which this “great rewiring of childhood” has interfered with children’s social and neurological development, covering everything from sleep deprivation to attention fragmentation, addiction, loneliness, social contagion, social comparison, and perfectionism. He explains why social media damages girls more than boys and why boys have been withdrawing from the real world into the virtual world, with disastrous consequences for themselves, their families, and their societies.
Most important, Haidt issues a clear call to action. He diagnoses the “collective action problems” that trap us, and then proposes four simple rules that might set us free. He describes steps that parents, teachers, schools, tech companies, and governments can take to end the epidemic of mental illness and restore a more humane childhood.
Haidt has spent his career speaking truth backed by data in the most difficult landscapes—communities polarized by politics and religion, campuses battling culture wars, and now the public health emergency faced by Gen Z. We cannot afford to ignore his findings about protecting our children—and ourselves—from the psychological damage of a phone-based life.
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I've struggled with PTSD for decades, as a result of the trauma, defamation and impoverishment caused by my now ex-husband and his "gender therapists" during and after his "transition." I am now on a much more even keel, after scheduling my days around walking with Nordic sticks, floor movement founded on my dance degree and after publishing my memoir. While Neddy continues to alienate our sons from me, I know I help trans widows by collecting the sole data in the world on our experiences. I have detransitioners contacting me also. Mind/body work IS the most important key to healing. Psychotherapy can only take you so far, and some therapists are downright damaging, like the ones who tell trans widows we have to use "female language" for our abusive ex-husbands. Gardening, birdwatching and time out in nature will help with healing. Kids must be kept on a tight schedule of limited screen time and like it or not, their friend groups must be monitored and contained. Learning not to ruminate, but rather to be in the moment, identifying the birds, seeing the butterflies and weeding the garden is the big secret.
I subscribed, at the beginning of January, to your substack, Eliza, but I am not seeing any links to the book group. Would you kindly point me in the right direction?