As promised, here are the next four techniques could try to help your anxious child:
5. Help Them Go from ‘What If’ to ‘What Is’
Research shows that coming back to the present can help alleviate this tendency. One effective method of doing this is to practice mindfulness exercises. Mindfulness brings a child from ‘what if’ to ‘what is’. To do this, help your child simply focus on their breath for a few minutes.
Christine Hawkins
Owner KMEC Hunter
6. Avoid Avoiding Everything that Causes Anxiety
The flight part of the flight-fight-freeze response urges your children to escape the threatening situation. Unfortunately, in the long run, avoidance makes anxiety worse. Kids who are able to manage their worry, break it down into manageable chunks. Let’s say your child is afraid of sitting on the swings in the park. Create mini-goals on the way to the bigger goal ( e.g., First visit: go to the edge of the park, next visit: walk into the park and sit next to the swings, and, finally, get on a swing). Take as many visits as are necessary for your child to feel okay before you try the next step.
7. Help Them Work Through a Checklist
Create a checklist so your child has a step-by-step method to calm down. What do you want them to do when they first feel anxiety coming on? If breathing helps them, then the first step is to pause and breathe. Next, they can evaluate the situation. In the end, you can create a hard copy checklist for your child to refer to when they feel anxious.
8. Practice Self-Compassion
Watching your child suffer from anxiety can be painful, frustrating, and confusing. There is not one parent that hasn’t wondered at one time or another if they are the cause of their child’s anxiety. Here’s the thing, research shows that anxiety is often the result of multiple factors (i.e., genes, brain physiology, temperament, environmental factors, past traumatic events, etc.). Please keep in mind, regardless of the cause; you can help them overcome it.
Here are two more websites you may find helpful:
• http://raisingchildren.net.au/ – an Australian parenting website.
• http://headspace.org.au/– website for help, support and information about young people and mental health.