Welcome

to my blog, Connect thru Love. My postings will be about changing the parenting paradigm from consequences and control, which do NOT, I believe, have long term effects on behavior, to a love based teaching/living model. And what i appreciate most about this model, even from my very right-brained perspective, is that it is based on neuroscience and what and how the brain processes experiences. And though I am a therapist, when I work with families who are encountering difficult behaviors in their children, I am an educator and a coach to the parents.

I invite you to not only read, but to comment and ask questions regarding behaviors you are encountering with your children. And if you are a teacher, counselor/therapist, or case manager, I would love to hear from you as well.

To ask a question, please email me at connecthrulove@gmail.com
or simply post it in the comment section.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Parents, Teachers, Caretakers, Mentors...

What emotion do you bring to an interaction with a child with severe behaviors? Are you able to park judgment at the door? Most importantly are you able to park fear at the door and approach that child/children from a place of love? This really is not an idle question as I have witnessed parents and professionals in the last week or so approach several different children from these various perspectives. I don't believe that we, as adults, all the time understand that when we bring judgment, punitive consequences, and criticism into our interactions with children, the basis is fear. As parents, we are afraid that others will judge us for our child's behaviors. As teachers, we fear that our peers, and those in authority over us will judge our teaching methods and our abilities. As CASA's, line staff in residential facilities, as therapists, we fear that we will lose control if we do not take a hard line with the children for whom we have responsibility. And each of these fear based perspectives translate into interactions that present ultimatums, interactions that put the burden of change on the child, interactions that breed fear in the child. If however, we could exit from that place where challenging/severe behavior begets hard nosed, controlling response and enter, instead, a place where we look at behavior as indicative of having meaning...a child communicating something that is happening internally, through their behavior. And most often they could not tell an adult in words what that behavior means. These children with severe behaviors are reacting from a state of stress and fear. They have been triggered in a place in their brain that cannot access reason...they are in a state of freeze, fight or flight. It has no rationale at least in terms of explanation. Their behavior has explained that they are completely dysregulated...meeting that child in a place of calm and understanding (you may not understand what has triggered that child, but you know he/she is not okay)means to respond to that child's needs and not choose those times as times to lay down the law, make the "or else" statements...just let it be a time to show compassion, empathy, understanding, flexibility...in other words, show love.

Monday, May 2, 2011

trauma=Trauma=TRAUMA

I was talking with an acquaintance a few days ago and she told me about a relative who has adopted or taken guardianship of 2 children ages 3 and 5. The 3 year old is a girl and the 5 year old is a boy and they had been adopted by another relative (single mother) who contracted terminal cancer and died last year. It was the wish of the dying mother that her cousin and husband should adopt the children and the children began visits with this cousin. By the time, the mother was on her "deathbed" the husband of the designated relative also was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer. The dying mother of the children, was convinced by her brother and his wife to sign papers allowing them to become the guardians of the children over the cousin because the husband was terminally ill as well and the "poor, unfortunate" children would have to again lose a parent. The children had already become very attached to the cousin and her family and actually did live with them for several months until the death of their mother. When their mother died, these two very young children were removed from the cousins home and taken to the home of their aunt.

These two children suffered trauma when they were removed from their bio mother at birth (who by the way was addicted to cocaine and cannabis). Please read this as in utero trauma! They were placed in a home of a single mother as foster children, pre-adoption and were adopted by their foster mother. Please read this as Trauma at birth (separation from bio mother)! Their foster mother adopted them and I'm sure they were becoming attached to her and she of course was bonded to them...she was diagnosed with cancer and they began to form a relationship with their cousin and her family who would adopt them if their adopted mother died. They lived with the cousin for many months prior to the death of their adopted mother...and began to form a relationship...their adopted mother died and they were taken from the person that had provided regulation for them during the period of their adopted mother's illness...they were taken because the cousins husband (who they also had a relationship with) was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer...TRAUMA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

These children, particularly the oldest child has been diagnosed as ADHD, Bi-Polar, and possibly Schizoid Affective...WOW!!!!! labels, labels, labels and it is all about trauma, Trauma, TRAUMA! They are of course on medication and the "new parents" are attempting all kind of behavior modification in order to deal with challenging behaviors.