Top 7 Challenges Faced by Teenagers Today in Kenya

Jane Kariuki
6 min readDec 7, 2020

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Did you know the categorization of Teenagers wasn’t a thing until the 1920s? In earlier centuries, there were children and adults and nothing in between. The emergence of this group brought with it long-term changes that affected how children transitioned to adulthood.

The challenges faced by teenagers today partly stemmed from these changes because:

  • The teenager label had to come with an identity which wasn’t positive
  • Teenagers were given fewer responsibilities at home as high school was introduced
  • They spent more unsupervised time together
  • Parents had less time to discipline their teenagers
  • The society started producing products that attracted them

Today’s teenage issues have a long history, and the world doesn’t offer a solution that you, as a parent, can trust. That means you need to be pro-active in learning how to help your teenager navigate the adolescent years. To help you become effective, here are seven commonest problems teenagers face today.

1. Smartphone addiction

Studies have shown that smartphone addiction is more common in teenagers than any other age-group, and the earlier a teen owns a phone, the higher the chances of a prolonged addictive pattern.

For the teenager, meeting people through social media, mobile apps, and texting platforms can lead to an attachment to a point they believe their virtual friends are more important than real-life relationships.

As your teenager interacts online, they are likely to meet predators, unhealthy information, and explicit sexual content. Phone addiction also leads to psychological problems of teenage students because it leads to reduced mental function and sluggishness.

Your role is to help your teenager understand that the mobile phone produces an unhealthy mindset and behavior that leads to negative effects like the problems of teenage relationships in the real world.

Sensitizing them of the challenges of teenage life found in smartphone addiction like low impulse control, anxiety, depression, and altered self-image will give them a reason to monitor their phone use outside you just telling them to stop overusing.

2. Conflict between Peer Pressure and Parental pressure

You often hear of peer pressure and forget that parents also pressure their teenagers to behave in a certain way. At this stage, your teenager desires acceptance and to belong to a group outside the home. At the same time, they want to please their parents.

Your teen finds themselves in a dilemma that forces them to choose whom to follow. The conflict they go through easily leads to teenage stress. You can reduce the burden for your teen by teaching them from an early age to choose their friends wisely to reduce the number of things that conflict with how you want your teen to behave.

You can also instruct them on how to deal with peer pressure wisely, no matter what type of peer pressure.

Teen pressure is usually conditional such that you have to do something for them to accept you. Letting your teen understand these dynamics and offering unconditional acceptance to counter what their peer’s offer will be of great help to win them over to your side.

At some point, they will give in to negative peer pressure and suffer the consequences. Use this failure as an avenue to correct as well as accept them even when they fall. You will have earned good ‘bonga’ points that will make them want to follow your counsel.

3. Body Image Issues

Body image concerns are among the top issues affecting youth today. For the teenager, this is when their bodily changes occur drastically with little time for them to process their new look. They find it hard to love their body and feel comfortable in how they look because the changes keep taking a new form as they progress in adolescence.

Among other factors, social media has caused the number of teenagers having body image issues to rise. As a parent in this age of technology, the burden for you has become greater, and your positive affirmation from an early age is needful. Watch out for eating disorders like anorexia, bulimia, binge-eating, which can arise as your teen tries to cope.

Understanding what they are going through is real in their minds goes a long way in assisting them to process the body image issues they are experiencing. Validating their feelings and thoughts simultaneously, offering guidance, and educating them will help move them towards accepting their bodies.

4. Underage Sex and the hook-up culture

Today’s teens understand hook-up culture as the norm, and some believe it is the only way to have fun when they meet up with their peers. You would agree that the movies, series, social media sites, and teen magazines have played a major role in normalizing underage sex. These TV shows that teens like glorify casual sex and portray teens who practice the hook-up culture as enjoying life while the rest are seen as nerds or losers.

It a known fact that most parents rarely believe their teenagers are sexually active. Keeping your mind open and realizing your teenager has the potential of engaging in sexual activity will prompt you to be pro-active in educating them about sex.

Studies have shown the earlier and consistent a parent is in having sex education conversations with their children, the higher the chances of the teenager delaying any sexual activity and dealing with these problems teenagers face today.

Since you cannot prevent your child from being online or watching shows, teaching them to sieve the narrative presented and invoking reasoning while engaging in these entertainment platforms will help them compare reality versus acting; thus, choose wisely.

5. Substance abuse

In Kenya, current statistics indicate that half of the drug users are aged between 10–19years, and the common drugs of choice are nicotine, cannabis, and alcohol.

Teenagers often underestimate the long-term effects of substance abuse, and their drive towards risk-taking drives them to try drugs. As with most drug addicts, teenagers also believe they can control their drug use and not become dependent on them.

Some of the top teenage issues today that cause teens to engage in drugs include stress, curiosity, peer pressure, emotional issues, and getting back at their parents.

Having conversations revolving around these issues and educating them on the negative effects and life-long impact of this habit will greatly help them. Setting limits and consequences while offering supportive help if your teen is already experimenting is a starting point in resolving the issue.

6. Mental health Issues

Mental health issues generally include any condition that affects your teenager’s perception, mood, behavior, and thinking pattern. It may be hard for you as a teen parent to differentiate at first because you may have already noticed such changes as your teen is in the adolescent stage.

Getting professional help when your instinct tells you there’s something else going on with your teen can save you a stressful period that may come with the many challenges of teenage life.

Depression, anxiety disorder, eating disorders, and social phobias are common mental health disorders among teenagers. Knowing the common teenage mental illness symptoms of the above disorders can help you catch it and intervene early.

7. Godlessness

These are the times where anything goes as long as it makes you happy, where truth is relative even when the facts stare at you and respecting authorities is shunned. Any religious affiliation is looked at as going against what the majority want because society today don’t want to be held accountable.

International media shows children as young as seven years being allowed to make permanent sex changes irrespective of their parent’s advice and their Christian values. When society rejects the existence of God, the moral lawgiver, the only other option is for people to do whatever they want.

Your teenager is exposed to these beliefs and the increasing push to deny the existence of God. You can help your teenager by researching together on the existence of God and looking at the evidence objectively.

History has proven that those who have the fear of God tend to live a life that honors and respects God, people, and authority. The transformation that occurs leads them to live a fruitful life.

Final remarks

Teenage hood is a period that comes with its challenges, but it is also an exciting period for you and your teenager to relate at a higher and more meaningful level. The young mind in your hands still needs plenty of guidance, which you can effectively offer when you have an idea of the problems teenagers face today.

Intentional educative conversations have been stressed throughout as the most effective intervention in handling these challenges faced by teenagers today. Even when they don’t seem to be listening, they are still getting something from your well-meaning effort. Keep the conversation going as you tackle head-on the challenges of teenage life.

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Jane Kariuki

A Freelance Writer and Blogger for hire in the Parenting, Health, and Psychology niche.