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Stress management for ambitious students
Dr. Susan D. Swick and Dr. Michael S. Jellinek offer strategies for helping young people deal with the stress that often accompanies drive and...
EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION CONFERENCE 2017
SAN FRANCISCO – Maladaptive perfectionism contributes to and is a risk factor for many common psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents, panelists said at the annual conference of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America.
“Perfectionism isn’t a disorder, it’s a personality style. Some of the kids who come in don’t meet criteria for any psychiatric disorder, they just have this personality style that really warrants treatment, because it is getting in the way of their living happy and productive lives. But I would say most of the time we see overlap with DSM Axis I disorders,” said Deborah Ledley, PhD, a clinical psychologist at the Children’s and Adult Center for OCD and Anxiety in Plymouth Meeting, Pa.
At this specialty clinic, most who are perfectionists also meet diagnostic criteria for generalized anxiety disorder. Perfectionism and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is another common combination.“Basically, when people present with multiple disorders and underlying perfectionism, it might actually be more effective to target the perfectionism, rather than treating each disorder sequentially,” according to Dr. Ledley. “Do we really need to treat social anxiety and panic disorder, and a subclinical eating disorder, or can we say, ‘This person is a perfectionist – let us treat that and see if we can remit all those disorders.’”
That strategy often has proved successful for Dr. Ledley and her fellow panelist Lynne Siqueland, PhD, who also practices at the center. Both specialize in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). They were quick to note that there are essentially no published studies on CBT for pediatric perfectionism. Nonetheless, they have found CBT to be quite effective in clinical practice, with the caveat that the standard, full-speed-ahead, 12-sessions-and-we’re done manualized approach to CBT as often applied to anxiety disorders, depression, and other CBT-amenable disorders will not work for perfectionistic youths.
“Perfectionists are often quite guarded and wary of treatment. We have found that jumping to therapy immediately can be a mistake,” Dr. Siqueland said. “We’ve learned the hard way that the most important part of treatment is you have to woo these people – carefully, slowly, addressing things that matter to them – because they don’t want to change, especially if perfectionism is working for them. The process of assessment must go beyond labeling or assigning a diagnosis. We need to get to know these kids and earn their trust. So we start with long conversations about life and values, and what’s working and not working for them.”Dr. Ledley agreed. “We are not rushing with these patients,” she said. “This is so different from the way we are with an OCD patient, for example. When I have an OCD patient, I have the initial session with the parents, then an assessment session with the kid, then in the next session, I do some psychoeducation, and in the session after that, I’m doing exposures, because I work fast. Working with perfectionist kids is different: I have to earn their trust. I tell them a lot of stories about patients I’ve worked with who are just like them.”
When the therapists meet with the parents for the first time – generally without the kids present – what they hear over and over again is, “My child is wound like a spring.” These are generally children who excel at everything: school, sports, music lessons, and other activities. And they are stressed out.
“These are the kids who are working on their Beethoven at age 8, trying to master the Moonlight Sonata. But the parents say the child is too hard on himself, freaking out over a grade less than 100% on a small quiz,” Dr. Ledley observed.
Sometimes, though, perfectionism backfires even in grade school, and the parents’ concern is not that their child is super accomplished yet not enjoying it, but rather that their kid has great potential and never gets anything done because of procrastination or an inability to hand in work that is less than perfect.
Dr. Ledley said when she first meets a perfectionist child, she typically sees a kid who looks perfect, has impeccable manners, and is mature beyond their years.
“They’re invested in coming across as successful in every way. They definitely do not let their guard down when you first meet them. But with these kids who look so perfect, we feel that there’s this fragility and fear, and delicacy lurking just below the surface. It’s almost like they’re afraid they’re going to break because they’re so held together,” according to the psychologist.
Once trust has been established and the youth has drawn up a requested list of the pros and cons of their perfectionism, Dr. Siqueland said, she hears a familiar refrain: “No freedom, no fun, no choice, no time for friends, tired all the time, and no sleep. That’s the usual list of the kids.”
The notion that hard-driving parents typically are at fault for pushing their child into perfectionism is a misconception.
“In our practice, I would say it’s self-induced perfectionism in 75% of cases,” according to Dr. Siqueland.
After spending considerable time establishing rapport with a perfectionist youth, Dr. Ledley and Dr. Siqueland emphasize three key messages:
1. While on the surface your perfectionist strategy makes sense, enabling you to bask in positive feedback from teachers, coaches, friends, and in some cases your parents, it simply can’t be kept up long term.
“To the ones who really want to go to college and med school, I just say, ‘It’s not going to work there. You’ll not survive college. Or maybe college, but certainly not med school. So are you going to fix it now or fix it later? If you want med school as a goal, let’s help you get there,’ ” Dr. Siqueland said.
2. Therapy is not about changing your values.
“They fear that, if they don’t push and sacrifice, they’re going to be average, or even a slacker – and slacker might be worse than average,” Dr. Siqueland continued.
“We tell them it’s OK to have a drive for excellence, to go after your dream, and to take pride in good work well done. These are your values, and that’s great. We are not in the business of turning you into a slacker,” Dr. Ledley added.
3. Perfectionism takes away choices.
Therapy is all about helping you to live your life rather than having anxiety order you around. You can learn to have freedom, fun, choice, and sleep while in most cases doing as well as or better than before on your grades.
For clinicians who are inexperienced in addressing perfectionism in youth, Dr. Ledley and Dr. Siqueland recommended as a useful primer “The Perfectionism Workbook for Teens” (Oakland, Calif.: New Harbinger Publications, 2016).
They reported having no financial conflicts of interest.
Dr. Susan D. Swick and Dr. Michael S. Jellinek offer strategies for helping young people deal with the stress that often accompanies drive and...