Seven-year-old Eabha (Ava) came by my office. She would occasionally drop in to tell me one of her stories or to sing me a song, but she seemed preoccupied and wasn’t her usual bubbly self. She played with a fidget she found in the toy box and after a short while, without looking in my direction said, ‘my dad has moved out and my mum has been crying a lot.’ She continued to play with the fidget.
‘Things were not right!’
Eabha stopped playing
and then she came and sat down opposite me, settled in her seat, and grabbed a
teddy that was nearby. Her eyes betrayed how she was feeling, and I wondered
how a seven-year-old processes such a traumatic episode unfolding before her
and around her and within her.
I asked her how she was
feeling, and she lowered her eyes and said, ‘When my mum told me that dad was
leaving my brain felt sad and then I cried.’
I asked what she meant
when she said that her brain felt sad. She said that she was thinking about why
this happened and if her mum and dad loved her. She said, ‘I was thinking it
was my fault.’ I asked her about how she felt when she said, ‘my brain felt
sad.’ She said she felt sad and scared. ‘And because you felt sad and scared
what did you do?’ I asked. ‘I began to shake, and I went to my room, and I
cried,’ she said.
I reflected back to
her what she said and asked her if I had her story right. She said I did, and
we continued to chat.
‘She knew I was listening.’
I worked with Eabha in
a one-to-one counselling situation on occasion and I also had done some work in
her class. We talked about feelings and strength of feelings and that they were
connected to our thinking and behaving. She understood that feeling, thinking, and
behaving were connected to each other. We called unhealthy (irrational)
thinking Brain Bully thinking which we agreed made Brain Bully
feelings and actions. We called healthy (rational) thinking Brain Friend
thinking which we agreed made feelings and behaviours that were helpful to us.
‘Brain Bully thinking makes Brain Bully
feelings.’
That Eabha was
familiar with these REBT (Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy) principles
afforded us a common language with which we could talk about our strength of feelings,
where they come from and how to work out ways to help Eabha help herself.
Eabha discovered that,
for instance, ‘it’s all my fault’ thinking was Brain Bully nonsense. We also agreed
that ‘it’s not fair’ thinking and ‘my dad or mum doesn’t love me’ thinking was
Brain Bully trying to make her feel worse than she needed to be. We talked
about different ways of thinking about things and we decided that what happened
was a decision made by adults and that she had nothing to do with it. We also
established that her mum and dad would still love her no matter what and that
even though they would not be living together she could get used to the idea
that she had two places to visit and have fun.
‘Flush stinking Brain Bully thinking down the
dunny!’
We talked about bad
things that could happen and we decided that there were other things that could
be worse than the situation she found herself in. She said that ‘this is really
bad, and I wish it didn’t happen but it’s not the worst thing that can happen
(compared to other things we talked about).’ Eabha began to look at things
differently, more from a Brain Friend perspective and she felt a lot better.
As a rational emotive
behaviour counsellor/educator I find it useful to be able talk to children in
ways that make sense to them. The idea that their emotions and behaviours are
caused by someone or something apart from themselves reinforces the idea that
someone or something makes their feelings and behaviours! Hence, they say
things like, ‘it made me sad when my dad moved away, and I can only feel happy
again if he comes back.’ In adult terms this irrational view could be framed
as; ‘Things must be or remain the way they’ve always been. I can’t handle it
and I can never be happy again if things aren’t how they must be.’
As it happened Eabha
adopted a different view of the situation:
‘Change my thinking and the world changes.’
Did she still feel
sad? Yes, she did on occasion, but it had a different intensity than before.
She had changed the way she assessed a very difficult situation and in doing so
modified how she felt and how she behaved in a self-helpful way.
PS Eabha bounded into
my office the other day and said, ‘guess what?’ I said, ‘the sky is blue.’ ‘Mum
and Dad are back together.’
PPS. This is a true
happening and details have been changed to protect the subject’s identity.
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