I remember being a teenager. My mood would swing so easily between depression and euphoria.
2007-08-23 09:55:48
·
answer #1
·
answered by fundamentalist1981 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
Ah, I suspect this is a school assignment. Don't you know that getting others to do your work is not going to help you much in the long run? These questions are designed to make you think, to develop your thought processes and come up with logical answers.
I'm not going to do your assignment, but I can give you a couple of hints. You are a teenager yourself, right? If so, then you have a ready source of information -- your own experience. What are some of the things that have happened to you that caused emotional hurricanes? How about your relationships with others? What kind of interaction do you have with parents, siblings, teachers? What do you worry about? Do you have any secrets you've never shared with others? These are all topics that evoke emotional responses. Then you could sum up the essay by saying that emotions play just about every role in the typical teenage life, because it's true. Never again will you experience the depth and multitude of emotions as you will do right at this time. So use that brain that God gave you, and get to work. Good luck!
2007-08-23 10:05:07
·
answer #2
·
answered by gldjns 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
It seems like you are hoping someone will write a paper for you. Trust in your own abilities and do it yourself. Also, be sure to proofread and spell check your assignment. Your question contains 4 errors: emotions is plural, not possessive so no apostrophe is needed; you omitted a word "a very detailed ______ "; thourough is spelled incorrectly, and you omitted another word after thourough. I imagine you're experiencing an emotion right now. Which one is it? How is it effecting your life? There you go, now you can write.
2007-08-23 10:06:01
·
answer #3
·
answered by slfranken 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Emotions do play a significant role in a teenager's life, due biologically to hormones, yes. Though they aren't necessarily dominated by them, they can be relatively unstable due to their tendencies to be frustrated or annoyed easily (resulting in explosive anger, whether or not it is expressed), can be saddened easily, which may or may not correlate with actual occurences in life, they can also be incredibly happy for no apparent reason (but usually only when their ego is satiated). And, all things seem to tie back to romantic relationships, whether it is silently pining for a classmate, dealing with one's broken heart or loneliness, or engaging in a relationship actively, with all the frustrations and joys that come along with it, such things have a big role in their emotions, whether or not they acknowledge it.
As a rule, however, males will express these feelings less, and females will hide some of them (usually just sadness). Few consciously wish to be emotional, but are just passionate by nature of the very youth that they is their greatest blessing, for the time being. They can control themselves. but sometimes just lose their grip when provoked or when overjoyed. But, for the most part, much of the problem may just be a budding sex drive and an inability to cope with stress that may affect certain outbursts or other erratic behavior.
2007-08-23 10:09:43
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
lol.. call me crazy, but the way you say it "I need a VERY detailed for the question above! Many, MANY details! It would be helpful to give examples of emotions, and explain how each one effects a typical teenage life." makes it sound like you need someone to give you answers for a report on the subject because you don't want to do it yourself.
2007-08-23 10:01:01
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Emotions play a role in a teenager's life, because the teenager has no frame of reference, self-confidence or sense of perspective, so every little change in emotion seems either euphoric or life-threatening. This person is thrown into adult situations with no preparation, is seen and treated as an adult in many cases, and is undergoing a wild roller-coaster of unfamiliar hormones coursing through their bloodstreams as their bodies mature.
If you're a teenager, relax, get a grip, and eventually it will all smooth out. Just don't do anything stupid and irreversible, like get married, until it does. Strange as it may seem to your ego, you're not the first one to go through this.
2007-08-23 10:02:04
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Emotions alone can be the most stressful thing for a teenager. And anything else on top of that is just too much to handle. Teenagers have this sense of thinking about the future and how we need to learn to grow up and quick. weare new at getting jobs and we have school and everythings comming at one time for us. That and being controlled by parents is another obstacle to follow. We feel a lot like the world is asking too much of us. Its like the world is throwing it all in your face at one time saying, this is how it IS and you can be sucessful or you will fail. All of those things teach us that we need to become independent to succeed so we argue with parents and we always think we are right. We are constantly judged and we are so hard on ourselves, thinking that we have to be better or be something we're not just to be considered cool or perfect.
2007-08-23 10:01:41
·
answer #7
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
I've heard the saying, "Hormones in gym shoes." You know the way a woman acts when she has PMS, or when going through the menopause. That is due to fluctuation of the hormones. In a male, because of testosterone, I've heard it said that you have to keep them from killing themselves until they reach the age of 25. I had three teen agers at once. My favorite song was "Here Comes my 19th Nervous Breakdown, " by the Rollin Stones, and I started to drink alcohol.
2007-08-23 10:05:06
·
answer #8
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Teenage emotions are fueled by hormones and are usually out of control. Beyond that, no, I won't write your essay for you.
2007-08-23 09:59:10
·
answer #9
·
answered by Michael 5
·
1⤊
0⤋