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Teenage is a crucial stage.
Cereals will germinate and turn into beans.
Infants are crawling and walking to evolve as teens.

Sprouting mind and feet now walking on filthy naughty streets.
Coaches are cautious about the wrong track they may compete

A tall healthy body with an immature silly brain.
Foolish stuff grabbing the juveniles in risky lanes

Keep chores aside and scan the minds of the silent beings.
Something has tangled in mini skulls learn the art of foreseeing.

Transforming features, voice and body structure.
This is the age of thoughts and dreams manufacture.

This is the stage of dreams, entertainment and passions.
Youngsters are attracted to mature relations.

Effortlessly believing the phoney lust phrase and emotions of a stranger.
Hey, juveniles, life is not so easy, it's loaded with struggle and danger.

Adequate direction and capable companions can create a beautiful path.
Positive attitude, reasonable counselling
Assist towards a new life with a fresh start.

Forgetting real-world living in fiction and imagination.
Teenage is a crucial stage and a delicate situation.


WHAT IS TEENAGE
LET'S UNDERSTAND......

Teenage is a beautiful stage of life and also a crucial phase. Teenagers are also known as adolescents. Its a stage of change from biological immaturity to maturity. It is a stage between childhood and adulthood or we can say it's the journey between childhood to adulthood is called teenage.
It's an age of dreams and passion. During this stage, teenagers start to understand the real world. They are coming out of innocent childhood and knocking adulthood. This phase of life can build a strong personality or can make a strong youngster vulnerable. In this stage, youngsters require proper guidance, self-confidence, emotional support
and the best peer group.

It's a crucial stage because in this stage youngsters are not fully mature. If they will not get proper guidance and attention they may lose track. In this stage youngsters are emotionally weak they may follow the advice and suggestion of strangers without knowing their real intention. They can get influenced by their wrong peer group because they are coming from a pure and innocent stage of life and
They need time to differentiate between good and bad. It's a time of confusion and upheaval for many families In this phase, youngsters require counselling in every walk. It's the responsibility of parents and mentors to guide and boost our teenagers.


Sometimes adolescents may get an inferiority complex due to mood swings and changes in body structure. They may feel shy due to a lack of confidence. During this stage, it's hard for teenagers to concentrate on their studies because the changes they perceive use to divert their minds. They spend more time in their imaginations than in reality.


One of the common stereotypes of adolescence is the rebellious, wild teen continually at odds with mom and dad. Although it may be the case for some kids and this is a time of emotional ups and downs, that stereotype certainly is not representative of most teens.

The primary goal of the teen years is to achieve independence. To do this, teens must start pulling away from their parents especially the parent whom they're the closest to. This can feel like teens are always at odds with parents or don't want to be around them the way they used to

Nowadays teenagers get addicted to social media social media is playing a vast role in the life of teenagers. It includes studies, online classes, fashion, shopping and many other activities.
But some side effects can harm their mental health. Too much addiction to social media can affect the lives of teenagers.


This stage is an age of physical and mental growth.
Adolescents are experiencing rapid changes in their bodies during this stage.
It's a stage of puberty. During this phase, adolescents went through different changes like biological/puberty, psychological/cognitive
social redefinition.

PHYSICAL CHANGE:

Puberty occurs at widely varying ages. For girls, puberty can begin as early as 8 years of age but more commonly starts about age ten. Girls may experience a growth spurt in height and overall body shape in the early teen years. Girls will continue to grow, although a little more slowly, until age 17 or 18. They will begin to develop breast buds as early as 8 years of age, reaching full breast development anywhere from 12 to 18 years. Pubic hair growth, as well as armpit and leg hair, can begin at around age 9 or 10.
Menarche, the beginning of menstrual periods, usually begins about two years following the first signs of puberty. That may be as early as age 10 and as late as age 15.

Boys begin their growth spurt in height at age 10 or 11, peaking at around age 14. They finish growing physically at about age 21. The genitals begin to enlarge as early as 9 years of age, with adult size and shape achieved at about age 16 or 17. Boys' voices change at about the same time.

SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL CHANGE:
During juvenility, you’ll see changes in the way your teenager interacts with family, friends and peers. Every teen’s social and emotional development is different. Your child’s unique combination of genes, brain development, environment, experiences with family and friends, and community and culture shape development.

Social changes and emotional changes show that your child is forming an independent identity and learning to be an adult.

SOCIAL CHANGE:
You might notice that your teen is:
searching for identity:
young people are busy working out who they are and where they fit in the world. This search can be influenced by gender, peer group, cultural background, media, school and family expectations
1)They will seek more independence. This is likely to influence the decisions your child makes and the relationships your child has with family and friends
2)They will seek more responsibility, both at home and at school
3)They are looking for new experiences: the nature of teenage brain development means that teenagers are likely to seek out new experiences and engage in more risk-taking behaviour. But they’re still developing control over their impulses
thinking more about “right” and “wrong”: your child will start developing a stronger individual set of values and morals. Teenagers also learn that they’re responsible for their actions, decisions and consequences. They question more things. Your words and actions shape your child’s sense of ‘‘right’’ and “wrong”
4)Influenced more by friends, especially when it comes to behaviour, sense of self and self-esteem
5)Starting to develop and explore a sexual identity: your youngsters might get attracted toward the opposite gender. They might start to have romantic relationships or go on “dates”. They will like to add more opposite gender friends These are not necessarily intimate relationships. For some young people, intimate or sexual relationships don’t occur until later on in life
6)Communicating by using different gadgets: the internet, cell phones and social media can significantly influence how your child communicates with friends and learns about the world.


EMOTIONAL CHANGE:
You might notice that your teen
shows strong feelings and intense emotions at different times. Moods might seem unpredictable. These emotional ups and downs can lead to increased conflict. Your child’s brain is still learning how to control and express emotions in a grown-up way is more sensitive to your emotions: young people get better at reading and processing other people’s emotions as they get older. While they’re developing these skills, they can sometimes misread facial expressions or body language is more self-conscious, especially about physical appearance and changes. Teenage self-esteem is often affected by appearance - or by how teenagers think they look. As they develop, teens might compare their bodies with those of friends and peers
goes through an “invincible” stage of thinking and acting as if nothing bad could happen to them. Your child’s decision-making skills are still developing, and your child is still learning about the consequences of actions.

CHANGE IN RELATIONSHIPS
You might notice that your teen:
wants to spend less time with family and more time with friends
they might have more arguments with you. some conflict between parents and children during the teenage years is normal as teens seek more independence. It shows that your child is maturing. Conflict tends to peak in early adolescence. If you feel like you’re arguing with your child all the time, it might help to know that this isn’t likely to affect your long term relationship with your child. During this stage, mood swings occur they get angry and irritated easily
They might see things differently from you: this isn’t because your child wants to upset you. It’s because your child is beginning to think more abstractly and to question different points of view. At the same time, some teens find it hard to understand the effects of their behaviour and comments on other people. These skills will develop with time. Their behaviour will change and they will get normal. These changes and mood swings are temporary.
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