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Adolescence and gifted: Addressing
existential dread
By J'Anne Ellsworth, Ph.D. and Martha Affeld
Adolescents often describe experiencing Existential Dread. Gifted youth
may be especially susceptible. If
teachers, parents and students work together, the following solutions
are suggested for consideration: a) nourish students socially, (b) work
toward acceptance of giftedness and teach methods for enhancing
emotional development, (c) provide philosophical nurturance. It
didn't ring a true note within me. I felt my own angst was the result
of developmental emotional impoverishment and could be traced directly
to a dysfunctional family system. I am
hearing the reverberating tones of existential dread now, however, in
my work with high school students and college underclassmen. I also
am impacted by the dark overtones of my four adolescent children's
friends, who are not completing high school or planning to college, or
who try school for a semester and do not stay focused or involved
enough to complete their classes. This
causes me to pay attention to actions and attitudes that speak of more
than ennui. I
decry the morbid sense of impassioned disinterest with which they
describe the future. It brings an uneasy ambivalence and a recollection
of Freud's statement, "The moment one inquires about the sense or value
of life, one is sick" (Jones, 1957, p. 465). I also
recall the comment by Lasko (1967) that once a person's belly is
consistently full, this lack of energy about living is precisely the
kind of thinking one might expect. I do
not know if adolescent thoughts and behavior are shaped by TV, video
game playing, drugs, violence or 'Rock and Roll'. There may be powerful
causal forces in the class distinctions that are so clear to children -
those who can afford a wardrobe of name brand jeans and those who would
kill for them. Some
pundits blame the breakdown of the family, some espouse the belief that
we have lost our sense of values. I suppose we may be seeing phenomena
unique to our historic times, but I recall very similar themes in myths
about the Olympian and Norse Gods, in Jewish historic and sacred
writings, in the journey of Buddha, in the oral traditions of Native
Americans and in classical literature that is written about adolescents. By too
much, I refer to the times children ask questions that we regard at
face value and thus perceive as shallow, and since they are young we
'spare' them depth, so they continue in the loop of horror. Or, we
assuage them rather than listening deeply enough to engage the
profundity of the issues and concerns being expressed? This next essay
was written by a young woman when she was a Junior in High School. But
the majority are enchanted by the idea -- maybe we want to say to our
parents, "You're right, we're losers," or maybe we are hoping they will
hear us say "Look what you've done. Now live in guilt." We
have all had the world at our fingertips. There is nothing left for us
to want. We can sit down and the world is brought to us. We have never
had to work for anything. We have had everything so there is nothing
left to want -- Nothing! And so
little has any meaning left. We don't have to work at being socially
appropriate or liked. We have the asylum of television. It likes you no
matter what. And nearly everyone likes it better than other people. It
certainly is more amusing! "We
might as well go down with smiles on our faces." "Might as well come
and go unattached as most people seem to be moving around us." And why
not? "Eat drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die." Sometimes
sex without concern for the partner seems like a good solution. Sex
seems to be the only thing left that doesn't lose intensity. It is as
intense for Generation X, maybe more. So as it was for the "me"
generation or the baby boomers, or anyone else, it can give us solace. So we
work to effect changes within our own peer group. The adult world
around us doesn't see how we are conquering discrimination among
ourselves -- how we are slowly becoming accepting of those who have
different sexual identities than what is considered the norm. Adults
do not see this as they look at us. They don't understand the silent
revolution and evolution. The question remains, "Will we live to see
the revolution, the undercover changes brought about? " Or are we going
to flounder in our own boredom and end up changing our lives by ending
them?" I
passed out the essay during a discussion of adolescent development. I
was startled at the resonance in the room. This child spoke for many. I
then asked how many of these bright young people had considered
suicide. Two
remarked they had been greeted with parental anger rather than
apprehension or questioning. It seemed to me that the group, as a
whole, carried a thread of lightly concealed hunger for someone to
stand as a target for dedication; give them a sense of purpose that
superseded self. This
word solutions is chosen carefully, because of the double entendre. I
do not believe in "all the answers," but I do believe in a team
approach where many take cognitive and personal responsibility for
hearing and doing, for adding personal strengths and insights. I
believe that adults seeing these adolescent issues, and youth knowing
that adults are seeing issues and are concerned, belongs in the middle
of working with the youth in a quest for answers. I also
believe it is hard work to listen deeply and openly enough to honor
that intensity, and doing so is sometimes rather unpleasant. That is
not because of the shock factor for youth, but because we adults lose
our own innocence and carry a heavier burden of understanding. Losing
hope may lead to losing focus. Our adolescents live in a dangerous
world with many escapes that are life swallowing. The potential is ever
present that our youth will not only lose hope and focus, but may lose
personal volition through poor choices. We would never leave a toddler
unattended close to the highway. Providing
youth with the education to make moral and psychological gains that are
commensurate with our scientific gains may provide an emotionally
healthy and socially adept intelligencia to steer us through the next
years, not moral pygmies and self appointed social outcasts who find
little to value in the human condition and little comfort in fellow
humans. So,
extra attention to gifted youth may enhance their passage through
adolescence and provide benefits to humanity as well. They
can be taught ways to enfranchise themselves and accept the lucidity of
feelings so that they can deal with them constructively and honestly. Many
youngsters who are gifted and talented appear driven, almost obsessed
in their areas of genius. This explains some of the solitary pursuit.
At the same time, there are feelings of ambivalence and inadequacy that
emerge, since fully half of our self acceptance is driven by our value
in others' eyes. Human
beings acquire ego development through interaction with others
(Erikson, 1968). Thus, children who are "driven" to play music while
peers are playing tag, lose out on valuable social nourishment and
development of ego strength. Many
of our greatest artists were recognized for their genius long after the
works were completed and the artist, musician, writer, died in poverty
and a sense of oblivion. While many people are able to work as team
players, those with extraordinary genius often report a sense of
isolation and a lack of interest in pursuing social or team efforts. It is
very compelling for many brilliant and talented people to have the
final project "just so," and to need to accomplish this either
oblivious of, or at the expense of, the vision of others. We
know a Degas when we see it, and others who imitated his style did just
that. We can distinguish between a J. S. Bach and J. C. Bach with
little trouble. One is the father, the other a son. One got close to
genius, the other was one. Every
Jr. High and High School has a group of outcasts. Teachers can reach
out and provide approval. Teachers can model appreciation of diversity
and provide support for those who are "different." We can
lessen the abyss between social acceptance and creative isolation by
valuing the person apart from appreciation of the product. Simply, we
value the being of the person rather than being caught up in simply
rejecting what the person is doing. There
are few parents who become angry when told that a son or daughter is in
the gifted program. At the same time, there are few who know how to ask
their children how they feel or know how to offer to be supportive. Sometimes
parents suffer with a child's social rejection and some feel a personal
alienation from the child. Parents can be assisted to understand the
importance of searching for self and become more adept at attending to
adolescent mood swings. Teachers can provide support to parents through
sharing awareness of these issues and current research about effective
programs and reading materials. Addressing
student feelings of isolation, alienation and depression as a team
could be very meaningful. This
paradox of esteem is confusing. What are parents to believe? "I know
everything." "I do everything right." "I have the answers to world
problems." "I'm afraid to walk alone in the Mall." "I'd rather die than
wear that brand of pants." "If I don't have a steady and a ring I can't
go to school." "I can't walk out of my room with this face full of
'zits'." To
borrow from Erikson's (1968) way of describing growth, adolescence is
assailed at every turn with certitude versus uncertainty. As youth and
adolescent brains continue to develop there will be greater flexibility
and times of disorientation will lessen. Adolescence
is a time of wide mood swings, great certitude followed by devastating
uncertainty, high hopes, grandiose dreams and feelings of crashing
defeat when dreams exceed the energy and expertise to complete the
doing. The
whole exercise was going very well. The teacher then turned the
exercise toward reflection and introspection. I watched the classroom
attention disintegrate. Agreeing
to the scoring and the labels of hostile or angry was acceptable to the
youth, but reflecting on how it was affecting others was either not
possible or not tolerable. Instead
of bemoaning the irresponsible thinking, or feeling like a personal
failure, parents can remind themselves that this youthful lack of
insight is transitory. We can be understanding about the lack of causal
and consistent information processing while the teen focuses energy
toward growing beyond the stage. Teen
suicidal ideation and depression may be approached the same way, as
very dangerous and transitory, abrupt in coming and assuaged with
proper attention, not personalization and recrimination. Social
skills may be a form of giftedness. If so, some have a charismatic
nature, a natural ease that draws others. Many of those we revere for
talent or intelligence did not. Lord Byron is an exception, and not the
rule. Despite
the lack of charisma, many of us learn to be socially adept. Social
graces can be acquired and the basics of human nature can be explained
to youngsters. Again, first we recognize the need, then we turn to the
family, the teachers, and the students to work out a plan for assessing
specific needs. As a
team we can develop a plan for enhancing acquisition of social skills
and coping mechanisms. Graciousness can be acquired as can tact and
timing. Incidentally, this issue is more broad based than just gifted
adolescents. Nearly all adolescents could benefit from a teaching
program addressing socialization and acceptance. Who is
a companion to someone twelve years old who wishes to discuss
immortality and the purpose of existence? There probably won't be many
in the school. Rather than feeling alienated by peer disinterest, youth
can learn to discuss those things that are mutual interests with age
mates. These
include mundane but reality based topics - food, music, acne, movies.
It is important to value intelligent pursuit, and to work to meet
individual needs, and it is also vital to teach students to look to and
meet the needs of others as well as self. Impatience with peer chatter
is just as damning as peer impatience with lofty topics. This
is a serious matter, this belonging and feeling accepted. It is vital
to recognize what we have to lose if other outlets and forms of social
attachment are not available to these youngsters. Though
many teens are resistant to adult intervention, they are not resistant
to being accepted into adult status and provided social outlets through
adult company. If this is viewed as mentoring it can be powerful. The
stakes are great enough to persuade me that a productive solution that
promotes social expertise is critical. This does not imply that the
child can provide companionship and social acceptance for the adult,
but rather that the child has someone who provides acceptance and
solace for them when needed. The
balance of power and control is best served by an adult who maintains
responsibility for the relationship rather than moving to the child's
emotional level and attempting to get personal needs met. We
have quirks regarding the gifted and talented. I see teachers and
parents act as though intellectual giftedness is something that must be
kept 'in the closet'. We seem loath to share awareness of a student's
intellectual gifts honestly. Information
about intellectual measurements have been kept from students since we
began tallying scores. In addition, though our society has beauty
contests quite openly and sports contests and awards are openly
displayed, we tend to make fun of the cognitively brilliant. We
have questionable terms of endearment that students and society use as
descriptors for those with extraordinary intellectual capacity, like
geek and nerd and egg head. By
helping students accept themselves, by dealing honestly with the pros
and cons of genius and by assisting ourselves and others to take
responsibility for disingenuous ambivalence about those of prodigy
status, we will shed light on the prejudices that are defying
fulfillment of these gifts. In
fact, it is my own personal belief that many gifted children will
pursue areas of intellectual and creative expertise unassisted, while
areas of social and emotional weakness will be ignored or denied. We can
assist youngsters to look at emotional strengths and fragility and then
provide training in self awareness, self understanding, second person
perspective, thus enhancing the emotional development processes. I can
see visible relief in their countenances when they find that it is
normal to question sexual identity, to lose track of time, to have a
period of disorganization, to desire the acceptance of peers and find
parent perspectives valueless for a time. It is important to give
youngsters a road map of adolescence so there is less damage from the
change. Youngsters
who recognize the multifaceted ways that gifted youth develop see that
they are advanced for their age in some ways and not in others, will be
able to help themselves maintain better emotional health and find
personalized means to pull themselves from the recurring morass of
depression and dread. Our
children who are cognitively gifted are often gifted with respect to
moral reasoning and philosophical speculation, as well. Children who
are intellectually precocious are also typically advanced
philosophically as well. Piaget
(1964) and Kohlberg (1984) described a developmental process for moral
or philosophical reasoning. We do have brilliant four-year-olds whose
first works relate to Gaia. We recognize the brilliance of John Mills
precisely because he moved beyond the mundane, in concert with his
first steps past his study table. We are
in awe at the depth of Da Vinci's world view and renaissance thinking,
not just his artistic accomplishments. The brilliance of thought is
there as a natural bent. Most philosophers wrote important treatises in
their early twenties. That
means the philosophical questions were already searing and insistent in
their teen years. Seeing the problems without support for solutions,
without knowledge about social and political complexity, may lead to
solutions, but it may also lead to depression and a feeling of
impotence. Facing
existential dread alone, without guidance, may lead to suicide rather
than deeper, questing thought. Serious attention to the individual's
perceptions and issues is crucial. Once
we take the student seriously, we can begin focusing reading to include
works of others who have asked about the same enduring questions. We
can talk constructively about age mates developing these same questions
or never being faced with them as urgently, thus reassuring students of
the saneness of their pursuits and making it feel less alienating. Along
with deep philosophical questions can come an ability to see and value
second person perspective. Three excellent sources for discussing
philosophical development are Jean Piaget (1964), who is fairly easy to
read, Lawrence Kohlberg (1984) who can be very difficult reading and
Carol Gilligan (1982) who speaks of the importance of considering
gender in the development of moral reasoning. There
is a literalness in a search for truth - 'One and only one truth, as I
personally am able to capture it,' to a more diverse search for
knowledge and for understanding the milieu of the question, the
perspective, the layers of ideation surrounding the quest. Realizing
that it may be impossible to gain all truth, to have all the answers,
is mixed with a desire to know all things and a hope of being able to
contain all wisdom. The
cycle of hoping and despairing, of feeling powerful and yet remaining
impotent adds to the dread and depression. It creates a roller coaster
of seeking for truth, yet hearing the whispers of how impossible the
search for the Holy Grail of all truth and wisdom may be. In the
meantime, the search continues and youthful energy waxes and wanes,
building to a crescendo and crashing in whimpers. Truly bright
youngsters need help maintaining equilibrium, especially since most
peers are neither engaged in, nor interested in the Quixotic pursuit. It
also helps teens to know that the mystical path to knowing is an
arduous task worthy of their time and energy, and just as unsettling
for all who walk it. To do
so would take insight, respectful communications, time, energy and
education for adults and for youngsters. I believe we can significantly
impact this concern with youngsters by addressing it developmentally in
the areas of emotional, social and philosophical growth. Our
gifted youth are not just intellectually different, but show
differences in most areas of development (Terman & Oden, 1959). As
described, youth can be affirmed in feelings of being different. Parents
and teachers can provide them with information about development, with
ways to link and communicate feelings to adults when a peer group is
not viable, and insight about depression, existential dread and ways to
recognize and utilize such emotions instead of becoming embroiled in
them or losing esteem and energy. Young
people can be taught to cope and can be given responsibility to help
themselves and to get help when the burden needs to be shared. If we
learn more about developmental milestones, we can relate to the stages
of growth, provide insight for self and the youth and recognize the
transitory nature of disquieting behaviors. We can
be mentors to these gifted youth and let them know that we are learning
from them as well as providing for their educational quests. We can
share developmental insights from specialists and focus some of the
learning experiences around classroom ideas and research. We can
listen carefully to the thoughts shared and provide nudges to send
students looking in productive areas rather than floundering. We need
not diminish the excitement of discovery but show genuine excitement as
students find the nooks and crannies we also found in our intellectual
climb. Teachers
can serve as an intellectual peer group also, as long as the ethic
guidelines of mentor ship are followed. We can also be alert to
depression and despair, and provide insights to students and parents
when danger seems imminent. The
people who I cherish most are those who stood as a warming presence,
not as far off beacons. I needed them! Our youth today need us close!
Erikson,
E.H. (1968). Identity, youth and crisis. New York: Norton. Gilligan,
C. (1982). In a different voice: Sex differences in the expression of
moral judgment. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. Ginott.
H. (1972). Teacher and child. New York: Macmillan Jones,
E. (1957). The life and work of Sigmund Freud. (Vol 3). New York: Basic
Books. Kierkegaard,
S.A. (1842). Sickness unto Death. Kohlberg,
L. (1981). The philosophy of moral development. San Francisco: Harper
& Row. Kohlberg,
L. (1984). Essays on moral development. San Francisco: Harper &
Row. Lasko,
A. A. (1967). "Psychotherapy, habits and values." In J.F. Bugental
(Ed.), Challenges of humanistic psychology (pp. 247-52). Her site at Northern Arizona University: http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jde7/
gifted / talented / high ability mental health : teen/young adult ~ ~ ~
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