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HELPING CHILDREN COPE WITH TRAGIC LOSS
by Robert Evans, Ed.D.
Tragic loss of any kind, including large, dramatic disasters like those that have rocked
the nation this week, reverberate throughout a school and a community. Like
everyone else, parents and teachers feel shock and disbelief, followed by immediate
concern about those who have been hurt and killed--and then by concern about
impact on their own children and students. All of us who are raising or working with
children worry about helping them understand how such a thing could happen,
especially when we ourselves cannot always make sense of it. We worry about saying
too much or too little, about not having enough information, about saying the wrong
thing. Though there is no perfect solution, there are five guidelines that can often
make a positive difference in talking with children.
1. It is helpful not to over-assume what the tragedy means to children. They
react differently depending on their age, their closeness to the situation, their
own personalities, what they hear and are told, and their family's pattern of
communication. Some may be deeply moved, others less so. Some may have
many questions, others fewer. Not all will be intensely affected. Showing little
reaction does not automatically mean a student is hiding or denying his or her
feelings.
2. Young people are remarkably resilient. They may become quite upset, but
given a chance to express what they feel, they usually resume their normal
lives--and often do so more rapidly than we adults. Tragic deaths can actually
hit adults harder than they do teenagers or young children. Most young people
do not benefit from extensive, probing adult-led questioning about their
reactions. They do profit from simple, direct information and from adults
being available to respond to their questions and to listen.
3. If you receive difficult questions from children it can be useful to understand
these before answering them. Often a request for information is spurred not
only by curiosity, but by a feeling. Usually, the child already has some idea
about this. We may be more helpful if, rather than plunging into an immediate
answer, we learn what motivates the question. This is particularly true if the
question is a difficult one. Parents can say, "What made you think of that?" or
"Can you tell me what you were thinking about?" Also, it can be good to ask
"What ideas do you have?" Once you know the meaning of the question, it is
easier to answer effectively.
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4. There may be questions we cannot answer, which can make us feel
inadequate. But children and teenagers are typically more comforted by
straight talk than by false assurances. Rather than to invent a response, it can
be much more helpful to say, "I don't know," or, "I'll try to find out."
5. Coping with a tragedy is not primarily a matter of technique, not something
best handled by a "strategy" that deviates sharply from a family's or a school's
familiar patterns of communication. The routines of school, for example, are
all by themselves a source of comforting continuity and assurance. Parents and
teachers both will rarely go wrong by relying on what is most basic between
them and children—caring and connection. At these times, even if everyone
feels deeply upset, your presence—your simply being with them, their
knowing that you are available—will be reassuring.
Rob Evans, a psychologist and school consultant, is the Director of The Human
Relations Service, in Wellesley, Mass.
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