A lot of faithful parents have had some version of this thought and felt ashamed for even thinking it: “My child has so much going for them. Why are they hurting like this?”
That question usually comes from love, confusion, and fear all tangled together. It also comes from a bad assumption, one many religious families still carry around without realizing it. We assume that good homes, church involvement, strong values, and busy schedules should form a kind of shield around our kids. Then anxiety shows up anyway. Or depression. Or self-harm. Or panic attacks. Or the slow frightening loss of a child who is still right there in front of us.
The mental health crisis among Latter-day Saint youth is real. LDS teenagers and young adults are not protected from it by testimony, seminary, or nice family photos. In some cases, the pressures in Mormon culture can make the struggle harder to name and harder to treat.
Families need less denial, less shame, and a lot more honesty.
Why are Mormon youth struggling with anxiety?
For the same broad reasons other young people are struggling, and for a few extra ones too.
Social media has poured gasoline on adolescent insecurity. Constant comparison, sleep disruption, online cruelty, and the pressure to perform a polished life are wrecking kids who were already trying to grow up in a hard time. Jonathan Haidt and others have made a strong case that smartphone life changed childhood fast, and not for the better.
Then add the LDS layer. Many youth feel pressure to be spiritually serious, morally clean, socially pleasant, academically strong, service-oriented, and emotionally stable all at once. They are told to prepare for missions, temple worthiness, leadership, school, marriage, and a bright future with God. Some hear all that as invitation. Others hear it as, “Do not mess this up.”
That difference matters.
When faith gets translated into performance, anxiety grows. We have already talked about this in our article on performative Christianity. A culture that rewards polish can quietly punish honesty. Youth learn to smile in public, bear a decent testimony, and hide what would make adults nervous.
“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28)
A lot of LDS youth do not feel rested. They feel watched, graded, and tired.
How to talk to kids about mental health Mormon families often misunderstand
Start by dropping the idea that every emotional struggle is primarily a spiritual problem.
Sometimes spiritual life affects mental health, of course. Guilt can hurt people. Isolation can hurt people. Sin can hurt people. But depression is not automatically a sign of weak faith. Anxiety is not automatically rebellion. Trauma is not healed by a better scripture chase alone. Church leaders themselves have been clearer on this than many members have.
If a child had asthma, parents would not rebuke them for insufficient righteousness. If a child had a broken arm, nobody would say the real answer was trying harder. Yet mental health still gets treated in some homes as if it is half medical and half moral failure.
That is bad doctrine and bad care.
Families need a different tone. Try these moves instead:
- Ask what your child is feeling before you start teaching
- Listen without turning every answer into a correction
- Name anxiety, depression, trauma, and panic as real conditions
- Tell children directly that needing help is not embarrassing
- Let home become the safest place to say, “I am not okay”
If that sounds simple, good. Simple is underrated. A lot of kids do not need a speech first. They need an adult who can stay calm long enough to hear them.
This connects to what we wrote in our article on why young adults are leaving the LDS Church. Many do not leave only because of doctrine or history. Some leave because church culture never felt emotionally safe enough for truth.
Is depression a lack of faith LDS perspective
No. It is not.
That sentence should not still need saying, but it does.
Depression is not a moral defect. Anxiety disorders are not proof of spiritual weakness. Medication is not a betrayal of trust in God. Therapy is not a concession to secularism. These are the sort of things faithful families should know by now, and yet a lot of youth still absorb the message that if they were praying better, repenting better, or believing better, they would be fine.
Some are not fine. Some are trying very hard. Some are praying through tears. Some feel guilty for being sad while surrounded by so much religious language about joy.
Parents and leaders need to stop loading extra shame onto an already suffering mind. Faith can support healing. Priesthood blessings can comfort. Scripture can steady the soul. But these should not be used as replacements for good clinical care when that care is needed.
Elder Renlund has spoken clearly about mental illness as a medical issue, not a character flaw. More parents need to act like they believe him.
There is another danger here too. Some homes become so focused on worthiness language that children start hearing all struggle as disapproval from God. That is poison for a tender conscience. The covenant path should not feel like an achievement ladder where every hard day means you slipped three rungs.
How to help a depressed teenager LDS parents love but cannot fix alone
First, accept that love is not always enough by itself.
Love is necessary. It is not always sufficient. A family can be warm, faithful, and fully committed and still need professional help. That is not failure. That is reality.
If your teen shows sustained sadness, withdrawal, sleep changes, appetite changes, academic collapse, self-harm, hopeless talk, or references to death, take it seriously. Do not wait for certainty. Early help beats late panic.
A practical response often looks like this:
- Schedule an appointment with a pediatrician or primary care doctor
- Seek a licensed therapist who will respect your family’s values
- Reduce unnecessary pressures where possible
- Protect sleep with real device limits at night
- Increase face-to-face support and lower family tension where you can
- Take any mention of self-harm or suicide with full seriousness
Parents should also examine the environment around the child. Are expectations crushing? Is every week overloaded? Is there room to fail, rest, change plans, or disappoint somebody without it turning into a spiritual drama?
This is one reason wise screen boundaries matter more than some parents admit. Sleep loss, comparison culture, and endless digital noise are brutal on anxious brains. Technology is not the whole problem, but it can absolutely make a fragile situation worse.
And yes, sometimes mission pressure is part of the issue. Parents should ask very honestly whether their child wants to serve, can serve, and is mentally healthy enough for that kind of demand. A mission is not a cure for anxiety. It is not a rehab plan for depression. It is not a way to force spiritual maturity into a frightened nervous system.
When should I seek professional help for my child’s mental health?
Earlier than your fear wants you to.
Families often delay because they do not want to overreact. Fair enough. No one wants to turn ordinary teenage turbulence into a diagnosis. But waiting for absolute certainty is one of the most common mistakes parents make.
Seek help when symptoms last more than a couple of weeks, start disrupting school or friendships, change eating or sleep patterns, involve self-harm, or leave you with the steady sense that your child is slipping away from normal life. Trust your instincts. Parents are often the first to know something is off, even before they can explain it clearly.
Professional help and faith can work together. Good therapy does not require abandoning belief. Good medical care does not compete with prayer. God is not threatened by competent doctors.
That same truth applies in other hard family issues too, including the complicated question of counseling, conscience, and vulnerable youth. Families need wisdom, not slogans. Mental health is no different.
And if you are a parent reading this while carrying private guilt, hear this clearly: your child’s struggle is not automatic proof that you failed them. You may have things to learn, apologize for, or change. Most parents do. But shame is not a treatment plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the warning signs that my teenager is struggling with mental health?
Watch for lasting changes in mood, sleep, appetite, energy, friendships, school performance, or interest in normal activities. Self-harm, hopeless talk, withdrawal, and talk of death should always be taken seriously.
Is depression or anxiety a sign of weak faith or sin?
No. Mental health conditions are not proof of spiritual failure. Faith can support healing, but depression and anxiety are real conditions that often need real treatment.
How can I support my child’s mental health without compromising our religious values?
Use both. Keep the parts of faith that bring peace, meaning, and belonging, and also get professional help when needed. A good therapist and a faithful home do not have to be in conflict.
Why do LDS youth seem to struggle with perfectionism?
Because some youth hear Church expectations through a filter of fear. Good teachings about discipleship can become toxic when they are heard as constant grading, conditional love, or pressure to be impressive all the time.
When should I seek professional help for my child’s mental health?
When symptoms persist, interfere with daily life, or include self-harm, hopelessness, or suicidal thoughts. Earlier help usually leads to better outcomes than waiting for a full crisis.
Latter-day Saint youth do not need families that explain away their pain. They need families strong enough to face it, wise enough to treat it, and loving enough to stay near while healing takes time.