Sorry Missingtheaction, but I couldn't disagree more when you say:_'Don't nag. Don't look worried. Step back.
Accept that he may not want to talk to you about it. He may prefer to talk to his friends, or being a bloke he may prefer not to talk to anyone at all and this may be the right thing for him.
He may already think he knows what you are going to say.
Be neutral and distant and he may come to you.
otherwise, get used to it. He's a Big Boy Now._
My son, aged seventeen, was in a similar place last year and we did what you suggest. He ended up taking an overdose! Thankfully, we got him to hospital and he has been getting the right treatment and seeing the right people ever since and we can now see the light at the end of the tunnel. BUT both my husband and I can't help blaming ourselves for thinking he was ' a big boy now' and leaving him to deal with it himself. We did not spot the beginning stages of his depression because we thought it waas partly down to him being a stroppy teenager. If only we had been able to advise him of the people to talk to at the time, he , and we, might not have just had the most horrendous year you could imagine. It is not just the depressed person who suffers, it is the entire family: our other son has lost a year of his relationship with his big brother,as well as missing out on some of the mum and dad time we have always given them both.The grandparents have lost something of their relationship with him, they have all been very suportive but of course they don't understand it all and my mum, especially, has been quite ill with the worry of it.And we have lost our son in some ways, because despite his improvement, he will never again be the carefree person he once was and we will forever worry just that bit more about him than we should! I still do't sleep through an entire night, because I have to get up to check that he is still breathing in the middle of the night! So, no, do be worried, do offer him the opportunity to talk and give him a list of other people he can call upon if he doesn't want to talk to you, but please, please, don't just accept it and say' he is a big boy now!'