Children鈥檚 mental health specialist Dr Pooky Knightsmith shares with us some practical ideas to help your child deal with worries.
Our children may be little, but sometimes they struggle with big feelings and there are lots of things that we can do to help them.
Recognising, responding to and processing emotions is an important skill that we can support our children to develop in whatever way feels best for us, and for them. Take a look through the below ideas and try what appeals most first. Make it fun, keep it interesting and stay curious.
Letting children鈥檚 worries go and calming things down
The first few ideas won鈥檛 get to the heart of the matter, but they鈥檒l help your child to feel a little differently right now. These ideas work well when a child is distressed and needs to be able to calm down, let go or move on.
1. Wash worries away
Water can be used to symbolise worries and as we wash our hands, or watch our toothpaste or bath water circle down the plughole, we can imagine that the water is our worries and that they鈥檙e draining away. For children who need to let go of worries before bed, building this in as part of the evening routine can help them to feel calmer and more ready for sleep.
2. Watch worries float away
Blowing and watching bubbles is very calming. Imagining that they are holding our hard feelings or that our worries are locked up inside them like little bubble prisons and then noticing them fly away or pop and disappear can feel like a relief. Alternatively, your child popping lots of bubbles while imagining they鈥檙e a worry warrior and each bubble popped is another worry beaten can be a more active way to chase away worries.
3. Uncoil the worry spring with jumping jacks
Sometimes worries can make our bodies feel like they鈥檙e too full and fizzy 鈥 like a fizzy drink bottle when you shake it. When they鈥檙e feeling like they might fizz over, getting physical can really help to lessen those uncomfortable physical sensations like they might pop. While just about anything highly physical will help, a favourite of mine is an impromptu jumping jack competition as you require nothing but a tiny bit of space. Doing jumping jacks alongside your child and seeing who can do the most or the quickest can be great fun; but if you鈥檙e not the jumping jack type, challenge them to do as many as they can in sixty seconds or see how quickly they can get to fifty or a hundred.
4. Beginning to breathe
If we鈥檙e feeling panicky, taking control of our breathing is a great way of sending strong messages to our brain and body that we鈥檙e in control and there鈥檚 no need to panic. Things quickly start to feel different. Breathing strategies that encourage longer out-breaths are especially effective at helping us to take control.
Floating feather
Trying this one out alongside your child as you鈥檙e breathing with them will help them to calm down.
- Hold your hand out in front of you, palm up
- Imagine that there is a feather floating on it
- Take a deep breath
- Use a big, long breath out to try and get the imaginary feather floating
- Keep it floating for as long as you can
You can do this as many times as you need to.
Five finger breathing
- Ask your child to hold their hand out in front of themselves.
- Starting with the thumb, get them to run a finger from their other hand across the fingers of the spread hand.
- Every time they run up a finger or thumb, they breathe in, pausing at the top.
- They breathe out as they run the finger down the other side, pausing at the bottom.
- When they've got to the end of their whole hand, they take a breath, shake things out and see if they feel differently鈥
5. Sensory sand hunt
Another way to calm things down and distract a child from their worries for a little while is with a sensory sand hunt. All you need to do is to hide a few items in sand and go exploring for them with your hands. Add to the fun by closing your eyes and having your child try to work out what the different items they find in the sand are without looking at them. This strategy works because it helps your child to focus in on the here and now and to really utilise their sense of touch, which can help to move their mind away from whatever was weighing them down and making them worry.
Exploring worries and what helps
These ideas will help us to understand more about the underlying causes of a child鈥檚 worries and what might help things to be or feel different for them. These ideas are best tried at times when both adult and child are relatively calm and happy because that鈥檚 when we鈥檙e best able to communicate and get curious. These ideas can be helpful because until we understand what the nature of the problem is, it is very challenging to try to help.
6. Junk model worry monster
Junk model with your child, building a monster together. Talk to them about how this monster represents worries. Forget about making the perfect monster, it鈥檚 more about the process. As you build the monster get curious about things like:
- Is the monster big or small?
- Is the monster spiky or smooth?
- Is it angry or scared?
- What colour is the monster?
- Does the monster have any powers?
- How can the monster be defeated?
- What would make the monster grow bigger?
- Are monsters always scary or can we make friends with them?
You can use a similar process to draw, paint or collage a worry monster. It鈥檚 the process that matters rather than the product. At the end, your child might enjoy taking control of their worries by either destroying or befriending their worry monster.
7. 'What helps?' handprints
Use safe poster paints to make a handprint of both hands 鈥 then have each finger, on one hand, represent a person that helps the child and the fingers on the other hand represent something that helps them feel better. Draw, write or stick pictures to represent what helps on or next to each finger.
The process of thinking about what and who helps is an important one and can often help our child to help us to help them. It鈥檚 okay if we end up sharing lots of our own ideas here if the child doesn鈥檛 yet have lots of ideas of their own. Keeping the finished handprint somewhere where they can regularly be reminded of what and who helps them can help them feel less alone and helpless with their worries. And we can remind our child that any time they are worried they can look at their hands and wiggle their fingers, remembering the people and things that help them.
8. Grow and shrink worries with play dough
Play dough can be a simple way to explore what makes worries bigger and what makes them smaller. Have your child start with a blob of play dough and make it bigger or smaller as their worries grow and shrink as you explore different scenarios. For example, you could talk through a typical day and consider how big their worries feel at different points between waking up and going back to bed. Or you could explore how their worries grow and shrink in different places, with different people or engaging in different activities.
9. Replay or role play toys
Using toys to replay conversations or role-play situations that are coming up that are worrying your child can be a good way to explore what鈥檚 worrying them and answer their questions. The unknown is scary for all of us, so practising things like an upcoming dentist visit with our toys can help us know a little bit more about what to expect. Similarly, if a child is distressed about something that has happened, they may be better able to show you than tell you, which might give you a better starting point for helping them to work through that particular worry.
10. Step into the shoes of a TV character
TV or book characters can be a great way to get curious about difficult emotions. Step into the shoes of a character and explore questions with your child like:
- How do you think they鈥檙e feeling?
- What do you think will happen next?
- I wonder how their body feels right now?
- What might make things better or worse?
- Who do you think might be able to help them?
- What could they do differently next time?
You could even use the characters as the inspiration to create your own stories to explore your ideas further.
The less experience a child has of the world, the bigger small worries will seem to them 鈥 maybe their current worry is the biggest worry they鈥檝e ever had to contend with; so even if it seems small to you, it seems huge to them. For this reason, it鈥檚 important not to be dismissive, but instead to use these early worries as a training ground for finding healthy ways to recognise and respond to difficult feelings. This also helps to deepen the connection between yourself and the child and creates a feeling of trust too. If they know that you鈥檒l help them work through the things that feel hard to them now, they鈥檙e far more likely to come to you about the bigger things later.