EXCERPTS
FROM: CHILD SURVIVORS OF SUICIDE: A Guidebook For Those Who Care For Them. by Rebecca
Parkin with Karen Duinne-Maxim. (available from the New Jersey Chapter of American
Foundation for Suicide Prevention)
What
do I tell the children?
Children
need to be told the truth in a way that is honest and straightforward. They should be told
of the suicidal nature of the death from the beginning in a way that they can understand.
If possible, you may wish to rehearse what needs to be said to be sure that your
statements will be honest and supportive. Repeat the facts if necessary and check to see
whether they have understood what you have said. As an example, one mother told her your
child that "Daddy had something like a heart attack except it was a brain attack.
Some sickness came over his brain and made his thinking unclear. He was not in his right
mind when he ended his life."
Let them express their feelings Listen to and address their questions and concerns. If the
children can't keep listening to you, recognize that this is a normal way for many people
to handle painful facts. Stop and let them know that they can approach you at any time if
they want to talk about it later.
Rationale: Withholding
the truth from children interferes with the grieving process. Children can work through
the trauma best when they are told the truth and have their feelings acknowledged and
accepted as they are. .........Answer questions in way that fit the child's developmental
stage and concept of death. .......Emphasize that the death has nothing to do with
anything the child did and does not mean that the deceased didn't love them.
What reactions should I expect?
Children may
experience the same range and intensity of feelings that many adults do. These may include
shock, numbness, denial, sadness, anger, anxiety, shame and guilt. (See the chart at the
end of the booklet.) Children may express their feelings by crying, withdrawing, laughing,
or expressing anger at you or others.
Rationale: All of these reactions are
normal. They are based on the children's experiences and concepts of death. The children
need your tolerance as they resolve their confusion and frightening feelings. Preschoolers
tend to believe that death is temporary and reversible. A common question may be
"Will Daddy be home for Christmas?" Elementary school children begin to
recognize that death is permanent, but they tend to personify death as a ghost or monster
who will snatch children away.
How
can I help the children?
However the
children respond, they need to know that they may express their feelings openly without
being condemned, and that you will support them emotionally as they handle the experience.
Like you, the children need time to understand and live through their reactions. Including
younger children in what's gong on may help reduce their fears of losing you. Older
children may be comforted by your listening and validating their concerns and by
encouraging and helping them return to routine activities with their peers.
Rationale: Children have less experience
to make sense of their reactions and know fewer ways to express their feelings. The
confusion of feelings may be may be masked by their behavior, which may appear "as
usual". Children may not show grief by crying, being sad or behaving as we might
expect. In fact, continuing their routine play or activities may be the best way the child
knows to control and reduce confusing and frightening feelings.
(Please refer to original resource and more resources listed under Suggested Books and
Pamphlets.)
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