The Lie About Teenage Rebellion—Exposed by a 16-Year-Old
Speaker
About this talk
The speaker gives a crisp, eye-opening reinterpretation of a word parents adore using: rebellion. His verdict on it? It does not exist. Rebellion, he says, is just what grown-ups choose to call it when a child has the audacity to be different. Sun’s arguments, supported by sociology and her relationship with her mother, who is famous for having a “non-rebellious” teenager, reveal three uncomfortable truths about “rebellion”: it is a power word, parental supervision is judgment, and most parents have empty trust accounts. His mother’s secret, she says, was not control, but trust. The talk ends with an invitation to give children back the right to self-definition. When “I believe you” replaces “I forbid you,” rebellion disappears. A current Grade-11 student in Minhang Crosspoint Academy. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
More talks to watch
Fall of an IdeaNaveen Cano
How much of you is actually you?Tengyao Zhang
Your startup will take everything you give to it. Make it countYan Simard
A fórmula do sucesso não existeFilipa Godinho
The Power of Resilience from Zanzibar to the WorldKhafsa Mohammed
What Does It Really Mean to Be Yourself?Weicheng Huang