What's happening.
Your teen — usually a girl, but increasingly a boy who's been on looksmaxxing TikTok — says quietly, “I hate my body,” or “I'm so ugly.” Your instinct is to argue them out of it. The instinct is wrong.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
I hate my body.
That's not true, you're beautiful! I'd kill for your skin.
You have to say that, you're my mom.
Well, what's wrong with it? You look fine to me.
Forget it. You don't get it.
- Compliments register as obligation (“you have to say that”) and confirm the teen feels unseen.
- “What's wrong with it?” turns the conversation into a defense — the teen has to justify why their feeling is real.
- “You look fine to me” is the parent saying their own perception is the truth, which by adolescent definition makes it irrelevant.
What works — and why.
I hate my body.
That sounds really heavy. I'm sorry you're feeling that.
...
Do you want to talk about it, or do you just want me to know?
Just… know. I guess.
Okay. I'm here whenever you do want to talk. And — separate question, no pressure — would it help to see someone you can vent to who isn't me?
- “Sounds heavy” names the weight without arguing with the content. The teen feels heard, not contradicted.
- Offering two doors (“talk” or “just know”) lets the teen pick the smaller commitment, which they will, and often comes back through the bigger door later.
- Mentioning a therapist as a “separate question, no pressure” plants the option without forcing it. Many teens accept the second time it's brought up, never the first.
Why this script works on a teen brain.
Body-image distress in adolescence is rarely about the body. It's about the algorithm-amplified gap between the teen's actual appearance and the curated version of every other body they see in a day — usually 200+ filtered images by lunchtime. The teen knows, intellectually, that what they're seeing is filtered. The amygdala doesn't care. The comparison registers as real.
This is why arguing with the content ("you're beautiful!") doesn't land — you're trying to win a logic argument against a feeling that bypasses logic. Validating the weight ("that sounds really heavy") is the only move that lowers the temperature, because it tells the brain: I'm not alone with this. Adolescent body-image researchers are clear that being heard without being argued with is the single most protective parental response.
The second move — asking if they want to talk OR just want you to know — is doing something specific. It's lowering the bar for what counts as enough. Most teens take the smaller door ("just want you to know") and feel safer for being allowed to. Many of them come back through the bigger door ("talk about it") later that week, once they've metabolized that you didn't push.
Same dynamic, different surface.
Your 13-year-old son has been quiet about looksmaxxing TikTok for months. Tonight, while you're loading the dishwasher together, he says flatly: "My jaw is messed up." You feel the same lurch you'd feel if your daughter had said it.
What usually happens.
Your jaw is fine. Where are you getting this?
It's not fine. You don't see it.
Stop watching that stuff. It's rotting your brain.
Cool. Forget I said anything.
- "Your jaw is fine" is the same parental-perception trap — your view of his body isn't the one he's measuring against.
- "Stop watching that stuff" attacks the only place he's currently getting community around this. He'll go quieter on it, not less obsessed.
- Boys' body-image distress is undertreated precisely because parents reflexively dismiss it as "that's a girl thing." The feedback that he's not being taken seriously will track for years.
What works better.
That sounds rough. Tell me what you mean — what are you seeing?
Like, my jawline. It's weak. All the TikToks say it.
Okay. That's a real thing a lot of guys are looking at right now. I'm not going to argue with you about your jaw — but I do want to ask: does it feel like a thing you're curious about, or a thing that's making you miserable?
...miserable, I guess.
Then I want to be useful here. Could we look at it together — what's the actual research, and is there someone who works with guys on this you'd want to talk to?
- "Tell me what you mean" instead of "you're wrong" treats him as a credible reporter of his own experience.
- Naming the broader trend ("a lot of guys") tells him he's not alone — which is what looksmaxxing communities exploit. You become the safer source of that same belonging.
- The curious-versus-miserable distinction gives him language to sort his own feeling, and an opening to ask for help without it feeling like a crisis.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- That sounds really heavy. I'm sorry you're feeling that.
- Do you want to talk about it, or do you just want me to know?
- I'm here whenever you do want to talk.
- Would it help to see someone who isn't me?
When to use each one.
-
That sounds really heavy. I'm sorry you're feeling that.
Use as the first response. Never as the only response — pair with one of the doors below within 30 seconds.
-
Do you want to talk about it, or do you just want me to know?
Use to lower the bar. Most teens pick 'just want you to know' first; they almost always come back to talk.
-
Is it a thing you're curious about, or a thing that's making you miserable?
Use when the topic is body-focused content (looksmaxxing, fitspo, thinspo). Helps the teen distinguish interest from distress.
-
Would it help to see someone who isn't me?
Use as a 'separate question, no pressure.' Often accepted the second or third time it's mentioned, almost never the first.