
Part
One of a Ten Part Series
By Dr. W. Dean Belnap
The
twenty-first century faces a war with no name and no marked
battleground. The casualties are our youth. They come
from every address and ability and they are being squandered
in what was once considered the lifestyle of only a degraded
few.
Our
feel-good culture, eroded by bad behavior, bad choices,
and for many teens a succession of very bad days has drugs,
alcohol, suicide, eating disorders, violence and the occult
just a quick step from the corner lemonade stand. Some
youth survive the onslaught; many do not.
Today’s
youth face a society with blurred lines of right and wrong
and in many cases, no wrong at all. Teens are raised
amid decay in families, schools and the streets on which
they live or roam. Gangs have stepped in to fill the
void of family; media, fashion, peer pressure and popularity
now dictate what were once decisions made at the kitchen
table. The scenes are ugly, scarred and riddled with
pain. Youth are forced to live beyond their years and
to make decisions not even contemplated by their parents:
Do I drink? Take meth? Smoke?
Use birth control? Join a gang? Bring a gun to school
or even stay in school? Do I distinguish myself by the
way I dress, tattoos, the color of my hair? Or my sexual
preferences? Should I consider suicide because my life
is sad and hopeless?
Who
failed the youth with birthright and promise? Parents?
The system? The entertainment industry? Friends? Religious
leaders? School administrators and teachers? Our youth
reflect our self-indulged culture. The radical shifts
of the last century have shaped a society that cares less,
craves more and seeks pleasure over peace. Social structures
that have grounded our sense of connection are disappearing;
communities are collapsing under the weight of youth misusing
agency.
Parents
who are solid, God-fearing, citizens are watching their
precious youth slide into the dark abyss that was once
considered the under-belly of society. It’s not so different
for those parents who themselves play close to the edge.
Without question every family is vulnerable.
Counseling
loads in the best of communities as well as the government
clinics are bulging with what we call “troubled” youth.
“Troubled” is not even close to the diagnosis. The common
terms “at risk” or “acting out” do not even begin to indicate
the depth of the problems swirling around teens. And
families. Put simply, the errant youth is manifesting
a brain gone wrong.
We
call it imprinting.
Stamped
into our minds C imprinted C is what happened today;
what we saw; what we said; what we took in and what we
felt. That imprinting is more than memory, more that
a series of good and bad days catalogued according to
date, time and place. Imprinting is a biological process
that takes place in the brain where we do our most selective
thinking. We are born with certain genetic connectors
that predispose us to act and think and make decisions
and connect those experiences to pleasure or pain. Imprinting
acts upon that genetic structure.
Teens
are still a work in progress; both the body and the mind
are maturing. Raging hormones are blamed for volatile
and surly responses, for existential angst and resentment
of authority. The explanation of what goes on in a teen's
head is far more fundamental. The brain a teen begins
with is not the one he leaves with at the waning of those
tumultuous years. Teens develop the ability to plan,
to organize, to manage emotions and complex tasks, to
understand and even empathize with others, to exercise
wisdom and good judgment. This happens not all at once
or with just passage of time. It is the essence of learning,
the programming of the brain that gives deference to the
singular human ability C to think and act responsibly.
In
the past decade science has determined that the brain
continues to develop during teen years, brain cells and
new neural connections take on new life. Between puberty
and young adulthood, the prefrontal lobe --- the executive
portion of the brain responsible for self-control, judgment,
emotional regulation, organization and planning --- warps
into renewed articulation. Teenage years are the second
chance to consolidate circuits for mature adult response.
Extraneous neurol branches get
pruned back as a newer and more efficient circuitry takes
over.
Teens
have power over the pruning process by what they see,
what they take in, what they do. It can be positive.
Or negative. At this phase of development, the ability
to catch the football, juggle functions and equations,
convert musical scores into finger play, compose poetry
and make linguini become both unconscious and enjoyable.
Born in these years are the sports enthusiasts, photographers,
computer wizards, biologists and architects. Their choices
project direction and give emphasis to budding interests
and hence wire their brains for further use. Teens process
information differently from adults.

While
teen years are a time for testing to establish personal
space, that experimenting need not compromise the soul
and its divine possibilities.
And
that's the key.
Amos
in the Old Testament spoke prophetically when he described
“a famine and thirst in the land.” So it is today. Youth
hunger for things spiritual; they substitute what they
cannot find with those destructive influences and substances
that help them feel anything in a darkening, lonely and
disturbing world. They turn to the tools that the world
has crafted to fill time and space but those means and
measures can never fill the soul. Only God can work such
miracles. In Jesus Christ is the love and light they
are seeking.
The
next article in this series will address: “Can Negative
Imprinting Be Reversed?”