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Susan Stiffelman

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Keeping Kids Calm Before -- and During -- the Storm

Posted: 08/27/11 03:02 PM ET

As unnerving as it is for parents who find themselves in Hurricane Irene's path, it can be terrifying for kids. When faced with a stressful experience, one of the ways children (and adults, for that matter) cope is to refer to prior times when they got through similar experiences. A child might think, I was scared when I had to go through basketball tryouts last year, or when I went to Julia's birthday party and didn't know any of the other kids, but I got through it and it turned out to be fun.

But when the frightening event is something they've never encountered before, they have no resources to help them deal with it, other than calm, reassuring comfort of their caregivers.

Here are some tips for helping anxious children get through the storm:

• Undoubtedly -- and understandably -- you're glued to the news for updates. Try to be aware that your children may have trouble integrating bits and pieces of information as they hear it from broadcasters, so do your best to offer a simple (age-appropriate) narrative that helps them get a sense of what the storm is doing. If at all possible, get your news online, so the TV isn't running non-stop in the background with alarming information that can be overwhelming to a youngster.

• Lean on rituals and routines. Do your best to weave in the familiar, whether it's Saturday morning chores, or Daddy's special smoothies. The more life feels normal, the less children will feel things are spinning out of control.

• Try to manage your own anxiety. Kids are highly attuned to their parents moods, especially in the midst of chaos. You may be very worried -- and that's okay -- but lean on adults to get support, rather than revealing each and every fearful thought to your kids. The more you come across as confident Captains of the ship, the more your children will feel safe.

• Check in with your kids to let them offload their fears. If they ask things like, "Does anyone die in a hurricane", you can say something like, "The good thing is that we now have lots of warning to prepare and stay safe during a storm. In the past, or in places where people didn't know a hurricane was coming -- or didn't make sure they were in a safe place during the storm -- there have been people who died. But we know the storm is coming and know how to keep us all out of the storm, so we're okay." Depending, of course, on the child's age, you may adjust this response, but only offer small units of information to a child's question (sort of the way you might answer, Where do babies come from?) before flooding your child with facts he didn't really want or need to know to be reassured.

• Offer physical contact. For many kids, Mommy or Daddy's lap makes all the scary things go away. Cuddling or snuggling with a good book can do wonders for helping quell a child's anxiety.

• Help your kids get their ya-ya's out. Even if you're housebound, you can create opportunities for physically releasing nervous energy. Have a dance contest to some good old fashioned disco or rock and roll. Let your kids lead an "exercise class." Play Simon Says, or Follow the Leader around the house. Physical movement is a vital element in discharging anxiety.

• Give your kids a job. Let them find the candles, load the flashlights with fresh batteries, or help you cook up something non-perishable to have on hand if the power does go out. Giving them a role or task helps empower them, and lessens their sense of being out of control.

• If kids ask questions about what's going to happen, be honest but brief. Don't elaborate unnecessary, but be frank, so they have some idea of what to expect if you are without power or the ordinary comforts of life for a period of time, so they're a bit prepared.

Show your children that you are in charge, stay calm and offer reassurance. Safe wishes to all!


Susan Stiffelman, Advice Mama

 
 
 

Follow Susan Stiffelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/susanstiffelman

As unnerving as it is for parents who find themselves in Hurricane Irene's path, it can be terrifying for kids. When faced with a stressful experience, one of the ways children (and adults, for that m...
As unnerving as it is for parents who find themselves in Hurricane Irene's path, it can be terrifying for kids. When faced with a stressful experience, one of the ways children (and adults, for that m...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SonyaInTx
Money doesn't buy class.....
12:38 AM on 08/29/2011
Calm parents = calm kids

As long as you calmly prepare and take shelter, kids will take your lead in staying calm.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
09:19 PM on 08/28/2011
Give em a Bible and tell em to pray real hard.

Paul/ Perry 1860
Chauncey1186
Yeah, I'm a soshulist - so what?
09:00 PM on 08/28/2011
I would add - turn off the d@mned television! The hype from the media does nothing to help folks prepare yet adds to the overall stresss by overinflating numbers, and generally trying to turn every natural disaster into the next apocolypse.
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lliberty4ever
Yeah- tell me another one !
08:50 PM on 08/28/2011
What - no "Hurricane Yoga for Children"?
Heck, we played outside in hurricanes !
The surf was definitely up !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robert horwitz
06:37 PM on 08/28/2011
I just tell my kids that monsters are less likely to hide in their closets and under their beds during bad storms and that seems to calm them down.
02:10 PM on 08/28/2011
If the adults are calm the children will calm.

Any nurse of lab tech who draws blood from children knows that truth. Hysterical parents have hysterical children. Nurses routinely bring their children with them if they are having their own blood drawn. Look this is want mommy does. Calm mother calm child. So when it is the child's turn the rule stil holds calm mom, the nurse, calm child.
ILuvFla
Feminist, Dem, Nerd
10:04 AM on 08/28/2011
Such bull-pucky. Make popcorn, play cards and light candles. It is a wonderful adventure provided by Mother Nature to prove her supremacy. Sit back and enjoy. When the kids are full of wonder, fear becomes manageable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrHopeful
Retired teacher, honors program director, author.
09:44 AM on 08/28/2011
When I was a kid in New York City, I thought hurricanes and blizzards were great fun! No school. No cars. And such a beautiful, silent scene when they were over. Never occurred to me that anyone could ever get hurt!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Craig 212
Tide goes in, tide goes out.
01:53 AM on 08/28/2011
Benadryl.
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CabCurious
green green green
01:19 AM on 08/28/2011
Just turn the damn TV off and stop talking about scary things non-stop.
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freddsky
"As busy as ever? Keep up the good work."
12:51 AM on 08/28/2011
My British friends might simply remind their wretched offspring to keep a stiff upper lip and then go off to calm the dogs, who could well be taken into bed and made a big fuss over. If a tree branch suddenly flew off and struck an unfortunate urchin, it would be told to place a wet flannel on the lump and stop moaning so. (It's good to be home in America where we can just admit we're a bit freaked and try to comfort each other. Wishing the East Coast a safe and good night.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HellBank
Curve: The loveliest distance between two points.
12:08 AM on 08/28/2011
I remember going through Hurricane Cleo in Miami when I was 4. I still remember beginning grateful that I was too little to help clean up all the glass on the ground from the solar hot water heaters.
12:06 AM on 08/28/2011
Wow, many years from now our kids and grandkids are going to look back and are going to be angry when they realize what crabby job we did raising them.
10:48 PM on 08/27/2011
I didn't read this pop culture nonsense. Common sense will do. It could start with a media that doesn't go hyperbolic over a category 1 hurricane that didn't scare the dickens out of us in my time and shouldn't now. I grew up in the times when we had air raid drills for nuclear attacks and hid under our desks at school. I think we can manage an occasional storm now.
Chauncey1186
Yeah, I'm a soshulist - so what?
09:07 PM on 08/28/2011
I chuckled when I read your comment. I too remember the air raid drills when "duck and cover" was the watchword of the day. Of course none of the teachers could answer how hiding under our desks was going to protect us all from nuclear fallout...especially the science teachers. Ah....good times. :P

Anyway, I agree...the media needs to quit overhyping "dangers" that aren't. I put it in the same catagory as the "x-raying halloween candy/there's a stranger waiting to abduct you/every adult male is a sexual pervert" hype.
10:44 PM on 08/27/2011
None of this will work. Everyone is just gonna go bonkers and you can't help that.