Situations Teens Face When Becoming a Parent
When it comes down to it, a teen is much more socially active than a woman is strictly for the main reason that the teen is usually still in school. Teenage years are built around growth, friends and learning about themselves. School provides this for a teenager and allows them to excel and mature at a consistent and acceptable rate. Here are some hurdles that will have to be overcome by a teen parent.
1.
School: It is often that a teenager will not be able to finish the school year. This often depends on what time of the year the teenager gets pregnant. It is also a realization that most schools will also not allow a teenage girl to be in school after a certain point in her pregnancy. Many teenage parents opt to finish their high school education with a GED if they are motivated. Although the teenager can consider furthering their education into college, the likelihood of this happening are very slim unless they have a significant amount of support from their friends and family regarding time and money.
2.
Finances: Giving birth and raising a baby also comes with monetary responsibilities. Being that the teenager will at best have a high school level education, they will statistically not have a higher paying job. Moreover, there are many teenagers who get pregnant that become single mothers. This makes the situation often more difficult. The result is the teenager living with their parents, if fortunate enough, or living in a poverty driven environment that is not conducive to the child or the mother.
3.
Missing Out on Youth: It is often a concern of a teenage mother that she will miss out on the youth that will abruptly be taken away from her. Although this might seem bearable at first, many teenage mothers find it has had devastating effects. It is part of the natural course of life to experience certain things and grow slowly. This is how we learn and mature.
If an expecting teen mother feels overwhelmed and not ready to take on this responsibility, she should be aware that there are thousands of loving couples who would love to raise her child for her. These are couples that have not been able to have a child on their own.
If you are a teen and would like to give your baby the best possible chance, contact us at Herston Roskind, PLC and see how we can help. There are many doors that we can open for you and your expected child. Remember, being a good mother sometimes means letting someone else do it for you.





What Does It Take to Be a Teen Parent?
To be a parent encompasses a wide variety of different responsibilities, emotions and sacrifices. The ultimate goal of a parent, whether mother, father or both; is to provide a child with the best life they can. With the responsibilities of being a parent, there come many sacrifices that parents willingly and gladly take. Being a teen parent does not exempt any of these responsibilities; however, it often magnifies the responsibility of being a parent.
The main difference between a grown woman and a teenager having a baby is the fact that the woman has been able to experience her youth and was allowed that time to gradually mature. When becoming a teen parent, the teen will be hurled into becoming mature and taking on the responsibilities that they might not be ready for mentally and emotionally.
Herston Roskind, PLC
Knoxville Tennessee Adoption Law Firm
Voted a Top Knoxville Adoption Attorney by City View Magazine
As an adoptive parent himself, Andy Roskind understands the stress and anxiety associated with adoptions.
We serve the following areas:
Knoxville, Maryville, Chattanooga, Tri-cities area, Knox County, Loudon County, Blount County, Union County, Jefferson County, Roane County and other areas throughout East Tennessee.
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