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Why Is My Teen Acting Like a Jerk?

June 6, 20264 min read

Four ways to understand your teen and meet them where they are.

Updated June 2, 2026 | Reviewed by Monica Vilhauer Ph.D.

The teen years are challenging. From hormonal shifts to identity development, your teen undergoes a sea of change. During this developmental phase, behavior often takes a detour. Affection gets replaced with bids for independence. Respect gets replaced with eye rolls and pushback. These behaviors can feel like rejection or rudeness. However, there's a scientific explanation for your child's personality shift: "the adolescent personality dip."

According to research , tweens and teens ages 10 to 16 can become more emotionally reactive, less agreeable, and less thoughtful. This behavior isn't intended to hurt parents or disrespect them; it's the result of hormonal shifts that influence how your teen thinks, feels, and behaves.

The adolescent personality dip can cause positive qualities such as self-discipline, motivation , and orderliness to seemingly disappear. These personality changes can set off alarm bells, especially when your child suddenly feels like a stranger.

Abrupt changes in our kid's personalities and behaviors can rattle our emotional lives. As parents, we may feel frightened, angry, and anxious.

Understanding what's going on with your teen can help you move from fear to empowerment.

Here are some tips to help you navigate this transition.

1. Meet your teen's behavior with curiosity

It's easy to ask "why" our teens are pushing back or less interested in spending time with us. These questions can lead us down an anxiety-laden rabbit hole, where we get stuck in a doom loop that only fuels worries instead of reducing them. And when teens hear "why" questions, they may feel attacked or shamed, as if we're pointing out their flaws or criticizing them.

Instead of asking "why" questions, try to ask "what" questions.

For example, instead of asking, "Why are you acting this way?" Try asking your teen, "What is going on for you today?" If you're feeling especially worked up by their behavior, take a beat before engaging and ask yourself, "What might be going on for me right now?"

Asking "what" questions piques curiosity. And science shows that curiosity can motivate people to make healthier choices and alter their behavior. It can also help us understand what's going on for our teen.

Emotion researchers call this "cognitive empathy," and it allows us to stand in another person's emotional world, which helps us empathize with their perspective.

2. Honor and name your own emotions

Relationships are a two-way street. Our teen's behavior can stir up a lot of our own emotions. In fact, research shows that one of the hardest parts of parenting occurs when our kids psychologically separate from us—a change that begins for them in adolescence .

As kids pull away, it's common to feel sad at the loss of their childhoods, sad that they no longer rely on us in the same way, or angry when they violate our boundaries or won't listen.

Simply honoring our emotions and taking a moment to name them goes a long way. Known as "emotions naming" by researchers, this helps calm the brain's amygdala, which helps temper intense feelings.

3. Understand the purpose of defenses

The word defense may sound like it comes from a football playbook, so what does it have to do with parenting, let alone raising teens?

In psychology, defenses are the brilliant ways we protect ourselves from feeling unbearable emotions. Often, this is done unknowingly. Therefore, your teen's eye-rolling, avoidance, surly attitude, pushback, or criticism can all be defenses against emotions they are unable to identify, let alone experience.

When we see these defenses in action, we don't want to call them out. Instead, we want to let our teen know that we're available when they want to talk. Leaving space while also being a sturdy presence helps kids feel supported, without feeling smothered.

4. Practice acceptance and self-compassion

Acceptance can be a hard pill to swallow, especially when we need to accept things we do not want or like.

But acceptance doesn't mean we "agree" with what's happening; it's an acknowledgment of how things are in one particular moment. And moments are always temporary. Acceptance doesn't mean we need to "like" what our teen is doing or how we're feeling.

Exercising self-compassion goes a long way, too. Research shows that self-compassion can improve symptoms of depression and anxiety . Compassion also helps us stay grounded, enabling us to parent from a place of authenticity rather than reactivity.

Parenting brings challenges at every age. Identifying what's going on for ourselves and our kids helps us approach tense moments with knowledge, emotional savvy, and resilience .

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Juli Fraga, Psy.D., is a psychodynamic and AEDP-trained psychotherapist in San Francisco, where she works with parents with kids of all ages. She is also the co-author of the book Parents Have Feelings, Too .

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This article is part of the Bringwise Psychology Journal — daily insights on human behavior, mental health, and personal growth.

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