Why Teen Violence Happens—and How Your Energy Helps Manage It.

Short answer: Teen violence usually isn’t one thing; it’s a pile-up of stressors that overwhelm a teen’s ability to regulate. The good news: your energy and daily rhythms at home are powerful protectors.
What sits underneath violence
- Unprocessed stress/trauma and constant conflict
- Dysregulated nervous system (anxiety, depression, poor sleep)
- Peer pressure & isolation (bullying, “fitting in,” online drama)
- School disconnection (feeling unseen, purposeless)
- Substance use lowering inhibition
- Access to lethal means turning bad moments into tragedies
Your co-regulation is a lever
When you stay calm, your teen can borrow that calm.
- Before talks: breathe slower, drop your shoulders, soften voice.
- Name feelings, not flaws: “I’m noticing you’re wired/tired—let’s reset.”
- Structure > lecture: clear routines for sleep, screens, food, movement.
- Micro-connection daily: a 10-minute walk, car chats, cooking together.
Conversation scripts:
- “I care more about you than who’s right. Let’s make a plan when we’re calm.”
- “What made today hard—social, school, or sleep? Pick one.”
- “On a scale of 1–10, how amped is your body? What would bring it down two points?”
Safety basics at home
- Ask about safety where your teen spends time (friends’ houses included).
- If firearms are present anywhere, confirm locked, unloaded, ammo separate.
- Agree on an exit phrase your teen can text to leave risky situations: “Pineapple.”
If you want a deeper guide to co-regulation and boundary-setting, order my latest book, What If Your Teen Isn’t the Problem? A Guide to Conscious Parenting.
If you would like to talk about options on Teen Coaching or Retreats, book a Free Consult.
Warmly, Debra









