
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


According to The New York Times, some teens are choosing to keep their masks on, even after pandemic mandates end . The reason isn't because they fear Covid. It's due to anxiety.
"The mask has offered teens a way to hide some of their anxiety symptoms and emotions from others, and wearing it has also made many of them feel 'normal' and 'like everybody else,'" writes Emily Sohn.
The last two plus years have been tough on teenagers. Rates of Anxiety and suicidal thinking are both high post-pandemic, as is social media use.
One psychologist described the "imaginary audience" with which many teens constantly deal: an invisible jury of peers scrutinizing their every decision. Only, in the age of social media, the audience isn't so "imaginary."
Masks, by contrast, provide a degree of relief via anonymity. Even if teens feel the need to hide their faces, they were made for face-to-face interaction. The lack of it—whether from isolation or screens—is no way forward.
We have to help students steward technology and their anxieties. A big part of that will mean investing in relationships that are out of the spotlight.
By Colson Center4.8
29922,992 ratings
According to The New York Times, some teens are choosing to keep their masks on, even after pandemic mandates end . The reason isn't because they fear Covid. It's due to anxiety.
"The mask has offered teens a way to hide some of their anxiety symptoms and emotions from others, and wearing it has also made many of them feel 'normal' and 'like everybody else,'" writes Emily Sohn.
The last two plus years have been tough on teenagers. Rates of Anxiety and suicidal thinking are both high post-pandemic, as is social media use.
One psychologist described the "imaginary audience" with which many teens constantly deal: an invisible jury of peers scrutinizing their every decision. Only, in the age of social media, the audience isn't so "imaginary."
Masks, by contrast, provide a degree of relief via anonymity. Even if teens feel the need to hide their faces, they were made for face-to-face interaction. The lack of it—whether from isolation or screens—is no way forward.
We have to help students steward technology and their anxieties. A big part of that will mean investing in relationships that are out of the spotlight.

8,642 Listeners

3,981 Listeners

1,268 Listeners

839 Listeners

3,810 Listeners

7,147 Listeners

587 Listeners

1,294 Listeners

21,256 Listeners

5,407 Listeners

1,051 Listeners

5,365 Listeners

644 Listeners

1,310 Listeners

1,366 Listeners