Helping Children and Teens Use Eye Contact: Does It Really Matter? And How to Talk About It Without Nagging

Helping Children and Teens Use Eye Contact: Does It Really Matter? And How to Talk About It Without Nagging

Have you looked directly into someone’s eyes today when you spoke with them? Did it help you understand them? Or connect with them? Or did it make you feel uncomfortable? And (perhaps more interestingly) did this eye contact or lack of something you thought about or did you do it all automatically?

Eye contact is a concept that generally doesn’t occupy much of our thinking. Most of us use appropriate eye contact automatically and without much thought. However eye contact may be an extremely important part of maintaining connected relationships with others and something worth thinking about more often…

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Understanding (All) the Reasons Children Act in Challenging Ways

Understanding (All) the Reasons Children Act in Challenging Ways

Imagine you have been unwell for several months - intermittent, low level but unpleasant symptoms – stomach pain, headaches and dizziness. A GP can’t find anything wrong with you and so you try diet changes, vitamins and getting more sleep – none of which makes a difference. You start to worry about whether you have a serious illness, - and feel frustrated about having to take time off work/social activities.

Eventually a specialist diagnoses you with a particular medical condition. Unfortunately it can’t be “cured” – but you now know how to manage it, what triggers it and how to make symptoms less severe. Almost immediately, even though you still don’t feel well, your overall suffering eases. Knowing causes of problems often makes us feel significantly better and helps us manage them more effectively - even if the problems themselves don’t disappear…

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12 practical steps to support children and young people who have experienced grief and loss

12 practical steps to support children and young people who have experienced grief and loss

Many children and teens have grief and loss experiences. It has been estimated that up to 1 in 15 young people experience the death of a parent or sibling by the age of 16. One study found 80% of 11-16 year olds report experiencing the death of a “close” family member or friend. Many children also experience other significant losses – for instance the “loss” of the family unit through parental separation, sudden loss of a family home (house fire/disaster), the death of a pet, loss of some aspect of health/mobility, or the loss of a favourite or treasured activity or possession.

Here are some ways we can support our children and teens through grief and loss experiences.

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“This is terrible!”:  How to help children and teens with their worried and fearful thoughts

“This is terrible!”:  How to help children and teens with their worried and fearful thoughts

Research shows that children and teens who struggle with anxiety “think in different ways” compared with children who do not have these challenges.

Studies have found children with anxiety are more likely to remember negative information in their environment, interpret ambiguous situations as potentially dangerous, and be able to identify a greater number of threats in any given situation. Other studies have found that the more anxious thinking a young person does, and the longer periods of time they spend worrying the more anxiety they experience.

Here are some steps we can take as parents to help children and teens manage their worried thoughts….

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I don’t want you to go! Children who feel anxious when apart from parents/caregivers

I don’t want you to go! Children who feel anxious when apart from parents/caregivers

Tina is in year 1, lives with her Mum and her older brother, and is very anxious about going to school. This issue has been a challenge for Tina and her Mum for some time – from kindergarten onwards.

However since starting year 1, Tina has become even more anxious. Every school morning, while Mum tries to convince her that she will be okay at school, she cries, yells, says she is sick, throws things, says “I hate you so much” and hits her Mum. Sometimes she vomits. Tina gets a stomach ache and headache most afternoons when she thinks about school the next day.

Tina is now only going to school once a week and has missed over 50 days of school this year.

As well as being anxious about going to school, Tina also feels uncomfortable staying with her grandparents when Mum goes out on the weekend, and does not want her Mum to leave when she goes to other children’s houses to play.

Does any of this sound familiar?

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