
The Final Stretch: Helping Your Child Manage End-of-Year Stress
April 20, 2026Summer Break and Mental Health: What Families Should Know Before School Ends
Summer should be a time of sunshine, slower mornings, and a break from the pressure of the school year. And for many kids, it is. But for others, the shift out of routine, away from friends, and into unstructured days can quietly become a source of stress, sadness, or anxiety.
As a parent, it can be hard to know what is normal summer restlessness and what might be worth paying closer attention to. At ZPH Group, we work with children, teens, and families throughout the year, and summer is a season we take seriously. Here is what we want families to know before the school year ends.
Why Summer Can Be Harder Than It Looks
Most people picture summer as the easy season. But the mental health reality for many kids tells a different story.
Routine Provides More Than Structure
Research consistently shows that predictable daily routines help regulate mood, sleep, and behavior in children and adolescents. When the school year ends, that scaffolding disappears overnight. For kids who already struggle with anxiety, ADHD, or mood challenges, the loss of structure can trigger a significant spike in symptoms.
This does not mean summer needs to be regimented, but it does mean that a complete absence of rhythm can be genuinely difficult for some kids to navigate.
Social Connection Looks Different in Summer
For many teens, school is the primary place where friendships happen. When school ends, those natural touchpoints disappear. Kids who rely on seeing their peers in hallways, at lunch, or in after-school activities may find themselves more isolated than expected, even if they did not realize how much those interactions mattered.
Social withdrawal and loneliness in summer are more common than parents often realize, particularly among middle and high school students.
The Pressure Does Not Always Go Away
Summer can carry its own pressures. Academic programs, college prep, competitive sports, standardized testing, and social comparison on social media do not take a break just because school does. For teens especially, the summer months can feel like another arena for achievement rather than rest.
Signs to Watch For in Your Child This Summer
You know your child better than anyone. If something feels off, trust that instinct. Here are some specific signs that may indicate your child is struggling emotionally or mentally during the summer months.
- Persistent changes in sleep, either sleeping significantly more or having consistent difficulty falling and staying asleep
- Irritability, low frustration tolerance, or increased emotional outbursts beyond typical summer boredom
- Withdrawal from activities they previously enjoyed or from family and friends
- Complaints of headaches or stomachaches without a clear physical cause, especially before anticipated social events
- Expressing feelings of worthlessness, hopelessness, or being a burden to others
- Increased screen use as a way to avoid rather than connect, paired with emotional numbness or withdrawal
- Anxiety about returning to school that begins early in the summer and intensifies over time
- Significant changes in appetite
One or two of these signs in isolation may not be cause for alarm. A pattern of several signs, or signs that are interfering with daily life, is worth taking seriously.
What You Can Do as a Parent
Keep Some Rhythm in the Day
You do not need a minute-by-minute schedule, but some predictable anchors, like a consistent wake time, a daily outdoor activity, or a family dinner together, can provide the steady ground kids need to feel settled.
Make Space for Real Conversations
Kids often do not volunteer how they are feeling, especially teenagers. Create low-pressure opportunities to check in, during a drive, a walk, or a shared activity. Ask open-ended questions and be willing to sit with uncomfortable answers rather than rushing to fix them.
Limit Social Comparison
Summer on social media can feel like an endless highlight reel. Consider setting some family norms around social media use, and talk openly with your teen about how curated online content differs from reality.
Stay Connected to Support
If your child has been working with a therapist during the school year, summer is not the time to take an extended break from care unless clinically appropriate. Continuity of support during transitions is often when it matters most.
When to Reach Out for Professional Support
Sometimes the best thing a parent can do is ask for help. There is no threshold you have to meet before reaching out to a mental health professional. If you are worried about your child, that concern is reason enough to start a conversation.
ZPH Group offers evidence-based therapy for children, teens, and adults in Florham Park, NJ. Our clinicians specialize in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), approaches that have strong research support for anxiety, depression, ADHD, and related concerns.
We offer a free 15-minute consultation for new patients, and most families are seen within one to two weeks of their initial inquiry. You do not have to wait until things feel like a crisis.
To learn more about our services, visit zphgroup.com or call us at 973-200-2037. You can also read more on our blog for ongoing mental health resources for families in New Jersey.
A Note on the Research Behind This
The CDC reports that approximately 1 in 5 children in the U.S. has a diagnosable mental health condition, and many go without treatment. Early intervention makes a measurable difference in outcomes. Summer, with its natural pause, is actually an ideal time to begin therapy for children who need it, without the added pressure of juggling school, homework, and extracurriculars.
The research is clear: when children receive support early, they are more likely to develop the coping skills and emotional resilience they need to thrive across all seasons of life.
ZPH Group Is Here This Summer
ZPH Group | Zarabi Psychological Health Group 205 Ridgedale Ave, Ste 201, Florham Park, NJ Phone: 973-200-2037 Email: info@zphgroup.com www.zphgroup.com
Summer does not have to be survived. With the right support, it can genuinely be the season where growth begins. If your family could use that kind of support, we would love to hear from you.




