Comic Vine News

63 Comments

Off My Mind: Should Teenage Superheroes Reveal Their Powers to Their Parents?

Teenagers often have secrets from their parents but should they keep superhuman abilities from them?

The teenage years can be the most difficult ones to go though. Not just for teens, but their parents as well. As a teen, you feel absolutely no one understands what you're going through. Chances are, parents would be the last ones the average teenager would confide in if they experienced a life-changing event.

Teenagers often do things their parents might not approve of. Of course those parents probably did things their parents approve of either. It's part of life and the hope is the teenager will do the right thing and not get in a situation where they'll get hurt.

No Caption Provided

What happens when those teenage years involved gaining superpowers? For anyone with superpowers, regardless of age, the secret identity is the biggest struggle. No one wants to deal with issues on their own and having someone to confide in is a good thing. For a teenage superhero, there are added considerations in sharing their identity. Despite the raw power and abilities they may possess, should teenage superheroes reveal their powers to their parents?

== TEASER ==

Keeping secrets isn't a healthy thing. It can eat you up from the inside. Every parent hopes their children will feel absolutely comfortable confiding in them. Possessing superhuman abilities is a little different than going to a party where people were drinking beer. The dangers are increased and it probably wouldn't be something a parent would approve of.

No Caption Provided

Having superpowers doesn't make a hero invulnerable...unless their power is invulnerability. The villains in the world are becoming more deadly each day. A teenage hero may have the firepower to go toe-to-toe with them but the lack of experience is all it would take for a villain to find an opening and make a deadly move. No parent wants their children to face unnecessary risks. If the parent forbids the teen in pursuing their superhero career, it's going to cause more tension to an already tense world for the teen.

No Caption Provided

The teenage hero that has to hide their superhero activities from their parents will have one more problem to be concerned with. They'll already have high school to cope with. Trying to keep up with homework and their social status will become difficult if they also have to try to find time to be a hero. They will need to come up with a way to explain to their parents why they have the sudden urge to be away from home in the evenings. The teen could try to come up with the excuse of a job or study group but those should result in paychecks and good grades. Having a friend to use as an excuse means the hero has to be able to maintain at least one friendship in order to have someone that will cover for them.

Parents are supposed to be there for their children. A teen going through changes should be able to have a conversation with their parents, especially when their life has been turned upside down. The parent can take the news of superpowers either way. They could try to forbid the child in participating in superhero activities but if the teen possesses superhuman abilities, could the parent actually stop them other than telling them they're grounded?

Click to enlarge.
Click to enlarge.

The other case would be the parent would be completely supportive. If they can buy into the "with great power comes great responsibility" angle, they might encourage their children to use their powers to do good and save lives. Of course they'd want to make sure the teen was properly trained and would know not to get in over their head. Whether the parent would be able to provide that training or help the teen find the proper place would be another situation.

No Caption Provided

Then there's the risk in parents knowing. Heroes often choose not to reveal their identities in order to protect their loved ones and friends. If family members don't know the secret, they can't be abducted and tortured to reveal what they know. If the parent is let in on the secret, what about other siblings? And as powerful as the teen may be, could an average parent actually condone their child putting their life at risk night after night? At least if the parent is aware, they wouldn't be caught off guard should they become the target of a supervillain.

It all comes down to what the relationship between parent and child was like before the powers developed or were acquired. Children shouldn't hide things from their parents but they will be placed in a situation where they'll have to ask what is the right thing to do? While they should tell their mom and dad, there's the risk that the parent will forbid them from continuing to be a hero. For the true hero, they can't simply sit back when innocent lives are at risk. If the lines of communication are open and the teen is honest, it's possible an agreement could be reached. A parent's main priority is the safety of their child but if they can be shown how capable the hero can be, they might be understanding and allow the hero to continue to save lives. Otherwise hiding their powers and activities from their parents will be one more distraction the hero might not be able to afford to have.

63 Comments

Avatar image for iceprince_x
IcePrince_X

5211

Forum Posts

628

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By IcePrince_X

So many gray areas to tackle here and there are some twisted writers who always de-value the "concept of family" and make it parents' always not understanding their kids. I believe MOST parents will do try to understand their kids.

Avatar image for ninjaprotocol
NinjaProtocol

105

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By NinjaProtocol
@VaizD said:

"S'up, dad. I'm Batman's sidekick."

I'd see that conversation going swimmingly.

This is why not. Plus, there's enough gay/pedophile jokes that bruce might get sued.
Avatar image for omegalpha
Omegalpha

62

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

Edited By Omegalpha

No...
 
Why would they? There is little to no benefit from the move and when you are in that state (teen years), you definitely would embrace something like this as a further separator from your parents.
 
But it always depends on the situation and you definitely want to have them know before you bite the dust.

Avatar image for themess1428
TheMess1428

2211

Forum Posts

7470

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 2

Edited By TheMess1428

I think they should tell their parents.

Avatar image for eyz
Eyz

3187

Forum Posts

304

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

Edited By Eyz

Yup! It was part of all the fun in Jaime Reyes' previous Blue Beetle on-going afterall :D

Avatar image for ranvage
ranvage

136

Forum Posts

253

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By ranvage

With great powers come great secrets. Keeps the hero and their parents safe.

Avatar image for dr_x
dr.x

953

Forum Posts

7071

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 177

User Lists: 16

Edited By dr.x

true that why i like secret ID , to proect thoughs who cannot proect themself

Avatar image for incrediblesplosions
IncredibleSplosions

55

Forum Posts

34

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

If I had super powers and I told my parents it would go something like this...

Me - "Hey Mom and Dad...got an A+ on my History exam..."

Mom and Dad - "Really son? That's great!!!"

Me - "Oh and I can fart flames and fly around...found that out this morning while on the crapper at college."

Parents - "..."

Me - "It's really quite epic and exciting."

Parents - "....."

Avatar image for _stryke_
_Stryke_

271

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By _Stryke_

Wow, this is a toughie. 
It may be to their (the teen's) benefit, but it also may be their demise due to making their parents a target.

Avatar image for luckydomino1
luckydomino1

495

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By luckydomino1

they should first mom/dad how do you feel about people with powers if they go crazy and troll about how those people are scum dont tell them take it to the grave if they are ok with or happy about the thought of super beings then tell them

Avatar image for nero_vell
Nero-Vell

4

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Nero-Vell

Parents are the worst people to tell anything.

Avatar image for abeyance
abeyance

261

Forum Posts

15700

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 1

Edited By abeyance

If I had powers as a teenager I'D NEVER TELL MY PARENTS until i was an adult. They wouldn't let me get away with anything. "If you got time to fight crime, you got time to do your homework and chores". That's just one of the dumb conversations that may come up. Revealing an idea to a loved one always seems like a good idea to most. I think it would make matters worst. If you're a superhero fighting crime and the news crew is taping live. Pretty sure that would put stress on the parents (especially if you're seemingly losing the fight. Look at superman's parents when he was fighting Doomsday for the first time) Then you'll have those parents that show up to ever fight in hopes to help. Let's not forget if a superhero gets blackmailed (say stealing). The first thing you get at home is a slap to the face and mom yelling "Why are they saying you were involved in bank heist?" Basically I see no advantages to revealing powers as a teen other than having a valid excuse to extend your curfew if you have one.

Avatar image for xanthiss
xanthiss

181

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By xanthiss

You make me clean my room and I will blow up the house. :oD

  • 63 results
  • 1
  • 2