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I get in my car to drive
across town, turning on the radio to check for a traffic report as I
pull onto the freeway. The
local news comes over the airwaves and within five minutes I learn that
a man was arrested for placing a hidden camera in a public restroom; a
police officer was accused of beating a suspect; a child had been
kidnapped; and an unidentified body had been found. National stories to
come would cover terrorism and the latest war news.
I don’t want to listen
to any more of the same while waiting for a traffic report, so I flip
off the radio in resignation. Grateful
for the peace, I drive in silence and remind myself again to keep the
radio off, especially if my children are in the car with me. The
headlines I find disturbing and depressing would be quite confusing and
scary for young children to hear.
Radio is only one of many
sources of scary news in our media rich environment. And the number of
ways scary news can find to invade our personal lives is growing
steadily. Thanks to
satellites, the internet and other technology, horrors from around the
world are thrust upon our families in emotion-laden, living color.
“Bad news travels fast” is an absurd understatement in today’s
world.
As yesterday’s
frightening headlines fade, new ones take their place.
The sickening news of Russian schoolchildren being murdered and
hostages being executed on camera affects all of us.
Natural disasters such as the devastating tsunamis that caused
the deaths of thousands can linger in our hearts and minds forever.
Parents have the additional emotional burden of how exposure to such
violence and cruelty affects their children.
We naturally want to shield them from such harsh realities, but
then we worry that too much protection may result in our children being
unprepared to cope with the real world.
Witnessing someone steal from a store was a shock for my
children, but they now understand that such things happen in the
“real” world. The lesson learned was valuable, so was it really a
terrible thing that they saw it?
The solution to preparing
children is not pumping young hearts and minds full of information about
all the dangers of the world, hoping to arm them against what lies
ahead. Knowing people are
capable of extreme cruelty won’t help children to deal with that
cruelty, it will shut down their hearts with fear. Solutions can be
found in the two most powerful tools parents have: their loving presence
in the lives of their children and their own inner guidance, or
intuition.
A parent’s dependable
presence will keep fear at bay and give children armor against harmful
realities that can wound vulnerable young hearts and minds.
After experiencing an earthquake, my children repeatedly told me
that they would have been even more scared if we hadn’t been together.
Research reveals that during circumstances that provoke anxiety, the
presence of a trusted adult can measurably reduce the normal stress
response. If your child
learns of a deadly hurricane that is destroying homes and threatening
lives, just being with him will change his emotional reaction. Parents
can be reassured that being with their children will naturally create a
more secure environment which will help them build emotional strength
gradually.
Moreover, if we make sure
to share the beauty that life offers while we are with them, our
children will experience what is right and good about the world. Their world-view will include more than the darkness people
are capable of and they will know the reality of love. This inner experience will give them more strength than all
the information we could give.
Parent’s intuition is a
more valuable resource than intellectual knowledge of facts.
Information is changing all the time, but we can learn to use
inner guidance as a dependable compass for all our decisions and teach
our children to do the same. If
parents spend time with their children and pay attention, their
intuition will help reveal what their children need and what they can
cope with. We will be able
to see when they are ready for more information, when fear takes over
and how best to provide comfort. When we trust our intuition we are more
likely to consider what’s happening behind the facts and make
decisions based on love, instead of fear.
As our children watch and learn from us, they too will use their
inner guidance to help them face whatever difficult circumstances life
gives them.
If our children are
surrounded by love and beauty, if they experience the comfort of our
loving presence, if they are protected from emotional burdens too heavy
to carry, and learn to listen to the voice of their hearts, then they
will have the inner resources to cope with the scary headlines of
today and tomorrow. Back to top
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Other
Articles
Preparing Children for a
Scary World by Lorna Knox
Children Need Help Dealing with
Disaster News by Lorna Knox
Children Need a Balanced View
by Lorna Knox
Excerpts from Oregonian, by
Margie Boule
You are welcome to use the articles by Lorna Knox that
posted here. Please give credit to the author and Joyful
Children and send us an email to let us know where it will be
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