The Children

Get yourself prepared for Christmas by reading our top tips

Do you dread the Christmas conversation that seems to start the minute the summer ends? It always seems to start off as a bit of a joke, but turns into a serious question frighteningly quickly.

For many people the whole festive season can be problematic beyond belief. The dream of a happy family supported by perfect images grinning out from the adverts, coupled with selective memories from our own childhood, can make a horrible mix. Especially when combined with the guilt that our children may not be experiencing the magic, but instead shattered dreams and painful reminders of last year or the past.

THINGS TO DO WITH YOUR CHILDREN

Here are a couple of ideas of things to do with your children that will help generate even more ideas of fun you can all have together in the future.

A FAMILY LIST OF FUN THINGS TO DO
Sit down with the children and make a list of all the adventures you’d like to go on and the fun things you’d like to do.

Use these categories and write down everyone’s ideas under each:

  • Start with the big ideas (day trips, holidays etc)
  • The things to do at home if it was raining and cold
  • The things to do outside that don’t cost any money if it was sunny
  • The things to do outside that don’t cost any money if it was raining and cold
  • Questions to help you talk about tricky stuff with the children

    Children of any age can find it difficult to talk about how they feel about not living with both their parents. They say it’s ‘fine’ or just don’t raise it but they’re NOT fine, so talk to them and help them tell you. This worksheet gives you an outline of questions you could ask to help you and your children talk.

  • How are you feeling?

    Lots of children can feel sad or angry etc (use whatever adjectives describe how you think your children are feeling) when they don’t live with their daddy / mummy anymore. Does it make you feel like that?

    IF YES: Which bits make you sad / angry etc? Which other bits?

  • ( categories: Worksheets | The Children )

    Talking to your children, and helping them to unburden their fears and worries

    Children of any age can find it difficult to talk about how they feel about not living with both their parents. They say it’s ‘fine’ or just don’t talk about it. But general wisdom is that children benefit from talking about it – just like the adults do! Without talking to you about it they can often get it wrong and think all sorts of things that would make your hair curl if you knew. So, time to find out what they’re thinking and help them through.

    When you start to look around for advice in this area the phrase you come across a lot is ‘age appropriate’ communication with children, and when you look for examples of what is age appropriate they’re hard to find. However, you know your children, you also know that what you say needs to be true because you can’t tell them one thing until they’re 18 and then tell them the truth because you think they’re now ‘old enough’ – that, quite frankly is asking for a HUGE backfire-ing session! Hard to imagine it working out well and child hugging parent saying ‘thanks for protecting me so well from such a horrid truth, I now feel well-adjusted enough to deal with it and will revise my feelings and attitudes towards you, dad and love in the light of it. Thanks wow you’re the best!’ So, keep it basic and heavily simplify the complicated adult bit, keeping the nub of what really happened / is happening there so that what you say is true and will still be true when they’re that 18 year old.

    ( categories: Articles | The Children )

    On your own with a sick child - you need a plan!

    I have decided that having ill children is the worst bit about this whole deal. Do not get me wrong, my family is so stuffed full of doctors and nurses that had it not been for my lamentable performance in chemistry O’ level (U) I too would have been pacing the wards. So how do I find myself at night thrown into a spasm of panic fearing for my son’s life as he has slight bout of the flu?

    Boy goes to bed off-colour and with a raised temperature, before he falls fast asleep he mutters turn the light off it hurts. Something is seriously wrong, he always sleeps with the light on! I turn light off, run down stairs ring my father (retired 20years) does his neck hurt??? I don’t know, ring your sister … could be meningitis!!!!!!!!!! Sister not there go on NHS Direct tap in ‘Temperature, eyes hurt with light, screen starts flashing ring 999 !!!!!!!!!!!! Think to self ‘eyes often hurt when you have a temp so I need to do some more tests’. Race upstairs, wake child with torch ‘does this hurt?’ I yell trying to remain calm, put your chin on chest, scour body for rash so thoroughly give child rash…. passes all the tests, begs to be allowed to go back to sleep. Go to bed at 10 can’t possibly leave him in another room how would I perform my hourly observations? So drag him in with me. Feels cooler…. Woken in night by wheezy chest…. Obviously at 3 in the morning this is pneumonia.. Call NHS Direct lovely lady on phone tells me the GP will ring within an hour .. An hour! I don’t have phone near bed… move bedding to sitting room, move son and self onto sofa … fall asleep. 2 hours later GP rings, child breathing normally, temperature down. 7.30am feel like I have done a few rounds with Frank Tyson.

    ( categories: Articles | The Children )
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