For Teens, Making Friends Is More Than Just Figuring Out Where To Meet People

In our therapy with teens, we find that making friends and navigating social issues is more than just answering the question: “Where do I meet people?” One of our favorite Kurt Vonnegut quotes is, “There’s plenty of love in the world if people would just LOOK.” Similarly, making friends is 99% qualitative, for both adults and teens.

Every teen needs something different in the realm of making friends. Some teens we see need to get a better understanding of who they are first. We help teens reflect on who they are, so that they can then identify who their people are. Maybe their people are more likely to be found in band than on the track team. Or maybe their people are in chorus or the poetry club.

In New York, Teens Have A Lot of Choices When It Comes To Making Friends

As an NYC therapy practice who works with teens, we know that one of the nice things about being a teenager in New York is that there are so many different kinds of teens and kinds of people. There’s a comic book scene, a goth scene, a musical scene, a queer scene, an art scene, conservatives, liberals, herbalists, people who are into piercings, evangelical Christians, Unitarians, Notre Dame football fans and more. The options are seemingly endless. Of course, the Internet has also expanded choices for teens.

Often with this glut of choices, teens can need some guidance figuring out where and with whom they fit in. We can help.

Social Pressures Can Limit These Choices For Teens

It’s important to note that while New York has copious opportunities for teens to meet friends, we shouldn’t ignore the ways that social pressure limits these choices. Just because there are a million different ways to dress, do their hair, music to listen to and people they can hang with doesn’t mean teens won’t encounter friction when it comes to making these choices.

Peer pressure is a powerful force (Vonnegut always says it’s the most powerful force in the universe). The pressure to conform rather than face being ridiculed is incredibly strong. If teens are going to make brave choices, they need a certain kind of social support to do so. One function of therapy, then, is to help teens navigate these social pressures so they can find their way toward social options and ways of expressing themselves that are more fitting to who they are and who they want to hang out with.

Social Anxiety: Building Self-Esteem Through Therapy

Teens can sometimes be afraid to put themselves out there socially. Often there is anxiety around this that needs to be addressed. Anyone who has ever been to middle school knows there are tremendous forces that can grind away at self-image, from ads that make you feel fat to teachers who make you feel stupid to so-called friends that make you feel like you’re doing it all wrong. Some people make it through okay, still able to feel good about themselves and stay strong in the struggle to make friends and be confident in the social world. Others need more help.

Social anxiety is frequently rooted in trauma, whether experiences of embarrassment or even, humiliation that needs to be worked through and healed. Self-esteem, self-regarding and being in touch with the ways in which a teen is a good person is a huge project of good therapy with teens and usually an important part of helping teens who get socially anxious. 

Being Friends With The “Wrong” People

Most adults we talk to in our therapy practice have had the experience, maybe more than once, of looking around and recognizing they have at least a few people in their lives that are dragging them down. This is also true for teens–perhaps even more so. There is more up in the air for adolescents as far as who they want to be. Their understanding of who they are is more variable and more likely to change over time. So too with their friendships.

Who are some of these “wrong” friends for teens? Friends that make fun of you, not in a fun way. Friends who are making a mess of their own lives. Friends who push you to do things you don’t want to do. Friends who act in ways you’d be ashamed to act. Friends who have a lot of wrong friends of their own. Friends who are always into some sort of mess.

Teens can sometimes try to make friends with the wrong people because they don’t really fit in with them or they might attract and tolerate people who aren’t so nice. Like most adults, teens also have “legacy” friends that may have worked at one stage of their life, but perhaps don’t as they get older.

Part Of Getting Better At Making Friends As A Teen Is Knowing When To Drop Friends That Aren’t So Nice

In our therapy practice, we find that teens, as well as adults, tend to radically underestimate just how much these “wrong” friends are dragging them down. Crummy friends tend to also have crummy friends, so teens are more likely to be surrounded by concentric circles of wrongness. Wrong friends can make teens feel bad and make them wonder if maybe they’re not such a great friend (and perhaps compel them to act like not such a good friend).

Learning to be selective, to stand up for oneself and to move on when a friendship isn’t working is a great developmental life skill. Learning it early, like in adolescence, brings advantages. Therapy can help in a lot of ways. Sometimes just talking through the social politics is essential. Often teens need help seeing with clarity just how wrong a friend is, even though it probably seems as if it was staring them in the face once it’s pointed out.

There’s also grief involved with dropping friends. Giving up on a wrong friend, no matter how wrong, is still a loss. In our therapy with teens, we provide an opportunity for teens to come to accept this change and work through the grief of parting ways.

Matt Lundquist headshot

Meet our founder and clinical director, Matt Lundquist, LCSW, MSEd

A Columbia University-trained psychotherapist with more than two decades of clinical experience, I've built a practice where my team and I help individuals, couples, and families get help to work through difficult experiences and create their lives.

Read more

Related blog posts:

Child with fingers crossed behind their back.

Lying Isn’t All Bad: Why and How to Be Curious When Your Kids Don’t Tell the Truth

Therapy with children: Kids lie for many reasons and parents should be curious about what lies communicate. We all lie—to ourselves and, in turn, to others. Adults lie for many different reasons, whether denying or avoiding a truth, convincing ourselves of something we want to believe, or protecting ourselves from a painful reality. So too with kids. In my therapy with children, the reasons why…

Teen sitting on bench talking.

Troubled Teen Programs Should Be a Last Resort: Less Authority Is More for Teens

Troubled teen programs are the logical, furthest extension of authority. A recent New York Times editorial, “The Troubled-Teen Industry Offers Trauma, Not Therapy,” argues for more regulatory oversight and best practices for troubled teen programs, some of which have been exposed in recent years for abuse. The troubled teen industry, the teen wilderness treatment industry, and teen residential…

Parent talking to child.

How to Process (And Help Kids Process) Feelings About the Uvalde Shooting: Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist on All Of It With Alison Stewart

After the news of the school shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas this week, we’re all (yet again) processing a complicated myriad of feelings: grief, unsafety, fear, sadness, despair, anger, frustration, numbness, and much more. Our Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist appeared on WNYC’s All Of It with Alison Stewart to respond to listeners’ concerns about how they—and…

Children walking.

Parents Have a Big Job to Do With Kids' Back-To-School Anxiety: Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist on All Of It with Alison Stewart

Returning To School In-Person Means Kids Will Need A Lot of Support . As New York City schools return to in-person classes, many parents and kids are dealing with anxiety about yet another uncertain transition—one of many in the past year and a half. Our Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist returned to WNYC’s All Of It with Alison Stewart to share his observations on the many concerns of…

Children drawing.

How Kids' Friendships Have Changed During The Pandemic: Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist in The Wall Street Journal

As Schools And Other Activities Resume In Person, Kids (And Their Parents) May See Differences In Their Friendships.  . With more and more school, sports, and other extracurricular programs for kids starting in person, children, as well as their parents, may realize that their friendships are not as close as before the pandemic. The Wall Street Journal spoke to our Founder and Clinical Director…

Connect with one of our senior therapists to make a plan to get started

If you prefer not to fill in a form, you can also email us (or type email@tribecatherapy.com into your preferred email tool).

Schedule an initial call with one of our therapists