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Helping daughters through tough times

We know a lot about girls and how to make them strong and free, and it’s never been more needed than it is today.

Steve Biddulph August 04, 2018

While most girls ‒ at least three out of every five ‒ turn out just fine, one in five will have serious teenage issues, and her family will need to galvanise, make changes, or get help, so that she will be all right. But, according to mental health researchers worldwide, one in five girls today will have problems that carry into adult life. Anxiety, unhappy sex and relationships, eating disorders and self harm are the most common. It’s important to know that at any age, lives can heal and repair but if heartache can be avoided, that’s what each of us would choose.

 

If a girl is going to struggle with her life, you will know it by 14, because that is the hardest age to be, and things come to a head. Sometimes the causes will go back to babyhood, toddlerhood or primary school, so there is plenty we can do at each of these ages and stages. In my research for Ten Things Girls Need Most, I searched for the evidence-based practical things mums and dads could ensure.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The last of the ten things girls need is not so easy to put into words. It’s spirituality. For some this might be a faith tradition, owned by parents and well developed to support their children. But for others ‒ and in fact, for all teenagers who must step outside their parents’ world to grow ‒ it means a chance to discover, in the natural world, in reading, in poetry or art, or from the lives of others, that they belong. That they are part of the whole, and need never feel lonely. On a beach one day, or upon a mountain top, or under a starry sky, your daughter may feel that sense, and be set free by it.

 

Nobody ever has all the Ten Things, it’s a life- long search. As parents, our role is to pinpoint what might be missing, and go searching for it.

 

 

 

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