welcome image

There has been an explosion in the prescribing of medication for very young children, particularly preschool and kindergarten boys (Juli Zito , Univ. of Maryland)

Children today are under enormous pressures rarely experienced by their parents or grandparents. Many of today's children are being enticed to grow up too quickly and are encountering challenges for which they are totally unprepared.

"Moody" and "unpredictable" are adjectives parents will often use when referring to their teenagers.

Adolescence can be the cruelest place on earth. It can really be heartless.  ( Tori Amos)

Removing a child from a traumatic environment does not remove the trauma from the child's memory.

"To be a man, a boy must see a man."  (J.R. Moehringer)

Wouldn't it be nice if children would simply listen and learn.

Don't wait for him to turn 10 before you reveal that you are not in fact the hired help whose job it is to clean up after him.

Relationships matter:  change comes through forming trusting relationships. People, not programs change people.

"The thing that impresses me most about North America is the way parents obey their children"    (King Edward VII , 1841-1910)

Learn more.

Counselling

Another option commonly pursued in finding solutions to children’s behaviour problems is counselling. The approaches in this grouping represent very broad and divergent directions, but all of them employ communication between a therapist and the client.

At one extreme end of the counselling continuum we have psychotherapy. Theories developed by Sigmund Freud and his adherents believe that the root cause of  person’s inappropriate behaviours lie in unresolved conflicts in the client’s past (frequently involving mother!). They hold that the solution is to take the client back in time to the traumatic incident or period and resolve those intense feelings by talking about them. The therapist would focus on maladjusted psychological forces such as drives, impulses, needs, motives, conflicts and  personality traits existing within the client. Once the conflict is resolved in the mind of the client through psychotherapy, the client is then able to put those feelings into a healthier perspective and the individual’s present functioning improves.

The goal of  any counselling is to get into the client’s head and determine what REALLY is going on. If the therapist is successful in getting into the child’s head, he can plant new ideas about responding to the world in a different way and the old inappropriate behaviours just fade away.

At the other extreme end of the “counselling” continuum, I would place therapies that facilitate two way communication but do not necessarily employ talking. Music therapy, play therapy, art therapy, etc.. are all examples where the child communicates what is really going on in his head by actions rather than words. If a child displays violent images in his artwork or has one doll “humping” another, the therapist interprets these behaviours and may speculate what trauma the child experienced thus opening a door for the therapist to enter with words.

Somewhere in the middle between psychotherapy and art therapy we have the everyday kind of “counselling” sessions that parents , teachers and social workers do with kids when we attempt to “talk” them out of destructive behaviour patterns and into constructive ones.

It has been my observation that for formal counselling to be useful 3 things need to be in place:

1. the child needs to truthfully admit they have a problem

2. the child must want to improve the problem

3. the child’s environment must support the changes

If any of these 3 are not embraced by the child or his parents, the probability of improved behaviour through counselling is slim. Even complete compliance to these 3 conditions seldom result in quick positive responses from the child. Old habits die hard.

Clearly the “counselling” option does not represent a universal solution to all children’s behaviour problems either.

Next posting – the “Skills Acquisition” approach

Back to Top

Workshops

+ Behaviour Management (now available online)

This full day or 2 evening workshop will introduce you […]

Learn more

+ A Parent’s Guide to the Teenage Brain

  A teenager’s brain is not just an adult brain […]

Learn more

+ Reading Rescue

A program for children with reading problems

Learn more

+ A Guided Tour of ADHD (now available online)

This workshop will present the facts, myths, misconceptions, controversy and […]

Learn more

See more of our workshops


Contact

2720 Rath Street, Putnam, Ontario
NOL 2BO

Phone: (519) 485-4678
Fax: (519) 485-0281

Email: info@rickharper.ca

Archive


Parents' Comments

“I am no longer overwhelmed with a child who has unending discipline and behaviour problems.”

(P.S. – London)