Thursday, September 19, 2019
How Children Deal with Death :: Papersb Stages Psychology Essays
How Children Deal with Death      	Death is hard to deal with for everyone, but for children  especially; they view death in various ways at different ages.   At these ages children need help and guidance from their parents.   The first step is to help them feel a part of the whole  experience, doing this will allow them to deal with the death.   The rest is counciling and (quick step number two;) the parentââ¬â¢s  main part should be to listen while the child talks, doing this  is very helpful for understanding the child.  This is also very  benneficial because it gives the child a chance to get his/her  feelings off, this relieves certain tensions.  So in order to  help children get through the grieving process age and maturity  level of the child must be concidered, and council should be  centered around the limitations of those statistics.    	Infants are one group, with no real understanding of death  but they can react to the way their parent/s react/s to loss.   When the physical love that a parent can provide is suddenly  missing, the child does have fears of separation.  Infants are  also very tuned in to their parentsââ¬â¢ feelings of stress and  sadness.  In relation to these feelings there might be noted  physical expressions such as: crying, crankiness, rashes and  clinging.  How one can handle this is to talk with others about  oneââ¬â¢s concerns with family members, or even the funeral director;  he/she has a good chance of knowing what to do.  Seek support and  help from family and friends.  Parent/s should try spending more  time each day with the child to ensure a secure feeling for the  child. (Wolfelt)  I have learned on the Discovery channel that  children who are physically touched develop better and more  fully, so loving them patting them and holding them often does  worlds of help. (experiment covered by the Discovery channel)    	For children ages two and a half to five; this is the stage  at which the child is likely to confuse death as a reversible  event like sleeping.  Or the death of someone close to them could  be viewed as punishment for something they have done; make sure  they know this is not so.  Children of this age are egocentric  and believe everything that happens to be caused by them or that  they will ââ¬Å"catchâ⬠ death and die as well.  A child might also  believe death to always be result of violence, this belief might  have come from what they see on TV.  Behaviors to look for are:  the child showing little concern for favorite TV shows, going    					    
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