Your Child's Development
A brain injury can disrupt the long and complicated process to move from childhood through to being a mature adult.
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Bringing out the best in a young person means:
Two qualities are of particular importance in this process; self-esteem and resilience – the ability to handle life’s ‘knocks’ and challenges. Support, love and respect of family members and peers and friends are the foundation for building resilience and self-esteem. A brain injury can make it more difficult, but there are lots of positive things you can do to help your child build his/her skills, self-esteem and resilience.
Bringing out the best in your child can include facilitating and encouraging them to be involved in activities that their friends and peers are doing. Swimming at the local pool, joining the scouts, getting a pizza with friends; these all help to build self-esteem and confidence and focus on the person and their strengths.
The best basis for helping your child is a loving, caring relationship, but behaviours resulting from brain injury can prove challenging.Try to see your child as separate from challenging behaviours e.g. ‘I love you, but I don’t like what you’re doing’. This can help you to work together on the problem, without a negative focus on the child.
Parents in general do lots of things to bring out the best in their child, and all these things can benefit young people with a brain injury:
In trying to understand challenging behaviour:
– they’ll learn best when the goal is something they want to achieve for themselves. It’s important to respect young people’s own choices and priorities.
It’s not uncommon for young people with a brain injury to behave in ways that are challenging or sometimes aggressive. They may have difficulty coping with small upsets and not even know why they are angry. Everybody feels angry, irritated or annoyed at times, but we all need ways of dealing with these feelings that are appropriate, socially acceptable, and constructive. Physical violence, verbal abuse, avoiding someone, or just ‘sitting on’ the emotion are all unhelpful.
Very young children often hit out when they are angry, but over time they learn to use words (even if these aren’t very polite). Saying ‘I hate you’ rather than delivering a punch shows that a child has learned the first step in anger management; a shift from a physical to a verbal way of expressing anger. Later on, a child may learn how to feel angry less often, as they learn to negotiate and see another person’s point of view.
Young people with a brain injury may have difficulty developing these more mature ways of managing anger. Cognitive problems can make it difficult to see things from another point of view.
Other people’s reactions vary. Some might try to ignore the problem, or blame somebody, or demand that the young person change, or they might just become upset. In the long-term, though, these responses generally don’t deal with the situation very effectively.
Conflicts may be frequent and intense, and discipline that works with other children might not be effective. Parents may find it hard to apply discipline at all.
These situations can be very distressing for parents and families. They can also be distressing to the young person; nobody likes to feel that their behaviour is out of control.
Young people with a brain injury can usually learn to avoid having their anger boil over into physical aggression. The following suggestions may help;
A brain injury can disrupt the long and complicated process to move from childhood through to being a mature adult.
Read moreChildren and young people with a brain injury may have difficulty with the social skills that most of us take for granted.
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