Right now, your teen believes that when something goes wrong, something is wrong with them.
One bad grade becomes "I'm not smart enough."
One awkward moment becomes "everyone thinks I'm weird."
One glitched presentation becomes proof they can't handle anything.
And until that link breaks, every setback will keep landing twice as hard as it should.
You see it in the freeze before tests.
The spiral after one bad day.
The refusal to try out for things.
The overthinking that turns small choices into impossible ones.
It isn't drama... It isn't laziness... It's a specific mental pattern. And once it's named, it can be broken.
Emily Carter spent years watching bright, capable teens convince themselves they were broken.
They weren't... they had simply never been taught the one skill that changes everything: how to handle things going wrong without making it mean something about who they are.
That's what this book gives them.
Inside Murphy's Law for Teens, your teen will discover:
The tone is honest, never preachy or cringe.
The scenarios are real teen life. Group chats, deadlines, leaked messages, friend group shifts, AI assignments gone wrong. Not abstract advice from a different generation.
Even if your teen shuts down the moment something goes wrong.
Even if they roll their eyes at every self-help book you've handed them.
Even if they're convinced nothing actually helps.
This works because it doesn't ask them to "stay positive" or pretend to be fearless. It teaches them what to actually do. In the moment. In real situations. With their real brain.
Your teen's next setback is already on its way. Every day without these tools is another day they'll face it the old way, taking it personally, spiraling, and losing a little more confidence in themselves.
Give them the foundation to handle it before the next bad day teaches them a lesson you wish they never had to learn.
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