Category: Q&As

How Can I Help my 16-Year-Old with Anxiety?

Published : Sep 16, 2025
By Dr. Ana Aznar

“How can I help my 16 year old son with anxiety?” 

16 year old boy with anxiety
Sad and frustrated hispanic teenager sitting on stairs and holding his head. Anxiety and depression in adolescence concept.

It is important that you understand your son’s anxiety. It is absolutely normal for him to feel anxious when he faces challenging situations, like an exam or meeting new people. In those cases, anxiety is an adaptive emotion because it fits the situation he is facing. Anxiety becomes a problem (and ultimately a disorder) if he feels anxious for six months or more or if his anxiety is so intense that it disrupts his daily functioning. If this is the case, it may be a good idea for him to see a psychologist specialized in anxiety in teenagers.  

Talk with him about his anxiety: Ask him how it feels like in his mind and his body and discuss what makes feel him anxious (an exam, speaking in public, meeting new people…). Next, help him to recognize when he is anxious (e.g., his hands feel clammy, his heart races, his breathing becomes shallow…). The next step is to come up together with relaxing techniques that he can use whenever he recognizes those anxiety signs. These techniques can be: breathing deeply 10 times, counting to 10, visualizing a place or a person that makes him happy, or splash very cold water on his face or wrists. The idea is that whenever he feels the anxiety coming, he will use one of these tools. He should use the one that works best for him. As you can tell, the goal is not to eliminate anxiety but to help him manage it.  

Very often when teenagers get anxious, they avoid the situations that make them anxious. So, for example, they avoid going to a birthday party or sitting an exam. At the beginning, this is a great short-term solution, but long-term avoidance makes anxiety worse because never confronting the situation makes it even more scary. If this is the case of your son, help him to take baby-steps to confront the situation he feels anxious about. The message you should give him is that every time he confronts the situation that makes him anxious, the anxiety will get milder and milder. 

Finally, it is important that you validate your son’s anxiety, and you make him feel safe and heard but do not amplify it. Your message should be: “I know you are anxious and that is OK and I am here to help you get through this”.  

Have a look at these articles as well: 

What Are Your Thoughts on Medication for Teens? 

How to Help a Child with Anxiety 

How to Face the Exam Season: When Anxiety Runs High 

I hope this information helps. Do get in touch with me if you want to discuss it further.  

I wish you and your son all the very best. 

Love, 

Ana 

Dr Ana Aznar 

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments
Cristo
2025-07-29 12:20:59
Amazing, thank you so much for this blog.
Pia Satrustegui
2025-04-25 07:23:36
Hola Ana,
Qué fantástico artículo y que buenos consejos. Ha sido de una gran ayuda. Un abrazo muy fuerte
Dr. Ana Aznar
2025-03-31 19:41:20
Qué ilusión tu mensaje, Pia! Gracias a tí por leernos.
Pia Satrustegui
2025-03-28 10:13:56
Querida Ana,
Maravilloso artículo sobre la serie Adolescentes y consejos de gran ayuda en una etapa tan complicada de nuestros hijos , tan desprotegidos frente a las nuevas tecnologías.Es una ayuda tremenda para nosotros. Muchas gracias
Armani
2025-03-06 09:31:35
This is ethically wrong and I don't think it's worth the damage it will ultimately cause to the relationship. And the issues it will cause for the one being spied on. Just don't do it.
Meghan
2025-02-07 21:26:19
Is there a printable version of the article? I am a school based mental health professional and would like to share it with parents.
J
2025-02-03 10:52:04
This is such a great writeup. I think too often we get caught in a rutt of trying to categorise everything. Our daily lives are kind of dictated by categories and labels, certainly in a digital world.

I'd imagine this is quite deteremental for a childs development in the long run as nothing stays the same forever, and we shouldn't really be making these categorisations, especially towards our children.

Just live life, sometimes you'll have to be the parent that's the shoulder to cry on. The week after you may have to raise your voice a little when everyone is in a rush and you're trying to get your children's shoes on.

Just balance it all out, don't be too self critical and pick up on what your child wants and needs.

Again, great writeup!
Dr. Ana Aznar
2024-09-13 12:51:46
Dear Robert,
Thank you so much for your comment. I totally get what you mean. It is always difficult to have kids living with you, wanting to support them and their parents but at the same time not wanting to step in anyone's toes. If there's anything we can do to support you and your family, please do not hesitate to get in touch with us.

Ana
Robert Eisenbart
2024-09-10 00:43:07
Great Article! I'm a retired FNP. Years ago I taught a STEP program to parents via family court cases. I now have a daughter and her man disciplining three children 4, 8, and 10. The 10 year old has ADHD and my personal diagnosis is she's also Oppositional/Defiant. I believe the OD came from harsh discipline. All they seem to do is punish and threaten physical punishment. They say positive reinforcement didn't work however they tried it for about 2 months and then went back to punishment. I can't reason with them as "they are the parents"!! is all I hear. They all live with me and have since the oldest was about 2. Sadly I can see the other 2 developing issues like anxiety and aggression as well. Trying to show them another side of adult supervision when I have them but frustrating.
Dr. Ana Aznar
2024-09-02 20:48:07
Really glad you found it useful! Thank you for being here and for your comment.

Ana
Dr. Ana Aznar
2024-05-17 09:55:58
Hi Donna,
sO great to have you here! Totally agree that Zara is great! What other topics would you like us to discuss?
Ana
Donna
2024-05-17 09:49:36
Love Zara’s ways of teaching for both parents & kids! Also so helpful. We want more!! (Please!) :D
Ana Aznar
2024-05-08 07:24:31
We are glad you found the content useful! Many thanks for being here.
Ana
Cristoj
2024-04-09 18:20:19
Great article!!!
Are you enjoying our blog?
Sign up to the REC Parenting newsletter

Registered in England & Wales. Company No.13460950. Registered office Salatin House, 19 Cedar Road, Sutton, SM2 5DA, United Kingdom

Important information about cookies
This web portal uses its own and third-party cookies to collect information that helps optimize your visit. Cookies are not used to collect personal information. You can allow its use or reject it, you can also change its settings whenever you want. More information is available in our Cookies policy.
These cookies help make the website usable by activating basic functions such as web browsing. page and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
Statistical cookies help website owners understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and providing information anonymously.