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Child
Development and its Relationship to Grief and Loss
What can
Parents Do To Help?
Reference: Myers, D. (1986) Psychology, New York, Worth Publishers
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Teen
Years
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General
Concepts of Development
- Formal
operational: thinks abstractly, like an adult
- Egocentric
- Magical
thinking – believes that just thinking about something
can make it happen (this is minimal)
- Attempting
to find a balance in terms of independence and dependence of
caregiver
- Peer relationships
are very important
- Self esteem
is developing
- Searching
for identity
Concept of Death
- Death is
final, an end to physical life
- Realization
of own mortality and thinks about the meaning of life
- May be interested
in physical and biological aspects of death
- May feel
that he caused death
- Understands
future and what loss will mean
Grief Issues
- May appear
fine
- May respond
to death with irritability, change in sleep, eating, school and
social behaviors
- May be concerned
with who will be caregiver
- May feel
stigma at school or around peers
- May be attached
to remaining caregiver/family
- May be concerned
about the future of self or others
- May attempt
to take on role of deceased
- Struggles
with needing support and not wanting it
What can you
do to help?
- Answer questions
- Maintain
a schedule
- Talk adolescent
to funeral or service if he chooses
- Include adolescent
in funeral/service
- Be available
when teen wants to talk
- Be honest
and factual
- Reduce expectations
- Model/encourage
appropriate expression of feelings and memory sharing
- Keep a
journal for adolescent of important events, ceremonies, newspaper
clippings
and stories
- Keep in contact
with school
- Start a family
communication journal
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Parents
Trauma Resource Center
www.tlcinstitute.org • 877-306-5256
© TLC Institute 2004
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