Why Children Bear the Brunt of Trump's America
BY BARBARA MILROD ON 5/19/17 AT 9:15 AM
Lucy, a shy, intelligent six-year-old, missed three days of school because she had stomachaches. The symptoms started the day after Lucy witnessed a loud argument while waiting for the bus with her babysitter. A scary man shouted at people waiting: Watch out, youre all going to be deported now! Lucy didnt know what deported meant, but she knew it was very bad. People told the man to leave and shouted insults at him that Lucy didnt understand. The man finally left, shaking his fist and threatening police action. Lucy held her babysitters hand, looked up and noticed tears in her sitters eyes. Lucys stomach started to rumble. Sadly, cases like Lucys are becoming increasingly common. The Conversation
Im a child and adolescent psychiatrist and psychoanalyst with expertise in anxiety disorders. Since Novembers election and the general political upheaval that accompanied it, medical professionals across the country have observed an uptick in agitation and anxiety among our young patients.
What do we know about how anxiety develops in children? And what can parents do to reduce it?
Strong emotions are contagious particularly anxiety. And while anxiety spreads easily among us all, children are the most vulnerable. Elementary school children lack a fully developed ability to solve problems on their own, making it difficult for them to separate other peoples worries (especially adults) from their own frightening fantasies.
Unfortunately, although kids tend to take on their parents worries, it can be hard for parents to control anxiety even in normal times. But these are not normal times: Politicians, the media and ordinary citizens on both sides are hurling heated rhetoric across the aisle, all of which is fueling anxiety.
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http://www.newsweek.com/why-child-anxiety-rise-trumps-america-612205