What's happening.
Your 15-year-old, casually, on the porch: “Honestly I can't remember the last time I was actually happy. Like, a year maybe.” You set down the iced tea.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
You were happy at your birthday two months ago!
I was performing happy. Not the same.
Well let's plan something fun this weekend.
(the disclosure of year-long flatness got bypassed for plan-something-fun)
- “You were happy at your birthday” argues with their internal experience using external evidence.
- “Plan something fun this weekend” treats year-long anhedonia as a calendar issue.
- The teen's “I was performing happy” is one of the clearest depression signals there is. Don't argue past it.
What works — and why.
Okay. That's a really important sentence and I'm so glad you said it. A year is a long time to not feel happy. That's not a personality, that's a condition. I want to get you in to see someone this week — not because something is broken, because what you described has a name and there's real treatment for it. Sound okay?
...yeah. Thank you for not telling me I'm just being dramatic.
- “That's a really important sentence and I'm so glad you said it” names the gravity instead of bypassing it.
- “That's not a personality, that's a condition” reframes from 'who they are' to 'what's happening to them' — the most clinically accurate reframe possible.
- Same-week clinical action signals you're taking it seriously without panic-spiraling.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- That's a really important sentence and I'm so glad you said it.
- A year is a long time to not feel happy.
- That's not a personality, that's a condition.
- I want to get you in to see someone this week — not because something is broken.
Year-long anhedonia is a textbook depression indicator. Pediatric psychiatrist or adolescent psychiatrist this week. 988 Crisis Lifeline if any suicidal ideation. SSRIs + CBT both have strong adolescent evidence. Anhedonia + sleep changes + lost interest = the depression triad — get it treated.