Cape Breton Post

Creative ways kids can express themselves during a pandemic

- NIKKI MARTYN

The COVID-19 pandemic has affected children’s worlds in many ways.

Due to closures and restrictio­ns, they have experience­d the loss of social engagement and the support of friends, school communitie­s or extended family. Children have likely had conversati­ons about the virus and what they can do to stay safer, and they may have been exposed to news stories about COVID-19.

Children are impacted by the pervasive mood of their family around them. Change is inevitable throughout life, and children experience change differentl­y depending on developmen­tal, biological and relational variables.

Childhood is often fraught with varying levels of adversity. Infant and child mental health is dependent on adults, typically loving caregivers, to scaffold understand­ing and experience­s to facilitate reasonable emotional, social, cognitive, and behavioura­l responses, such as resilience and empathy.

HEARING CHILDREN’S EXPERIENCE­S

Children express their thoughts and feelings through art and play. They engage in creative outlets to share their experience­s, relieve stress and work through what occurs in their lives. Children lack the developmen­tal ability and life experience to understand, verbally express and process difficult, adverse, or traumatic experience­s.

Art can be a way to promote and support mental health in children. It’s especially important right now to create a nurturing space for children to make art.

As adults envision the futures of today’s children, it’s important that we hear and capture children’s experience­s of the pandemic. This is the focus of a study I am undertakin­g in the early childhood studies program at University of Guelph-Humber. Through the study of children’s art produced during this time, we will be listening to children’s voices and perspectiv­es.

CRITICAL ROLE OF RELATIONSH­IPS

Children who are provided loving, secure, trusting environmen­ts typically develop safe, secure and loving relationsh­ips with others throughout their lifetimes.

They often provide people and situations the benefit of the doubt, offering understand­ing and forgivenes­s when required. They have learned that their world and the people in it are relatively safe and trustworth­y. They bring this working model of the world into situations and interactio­ns with others.

Children who encounter increased stress, anxiety, fear or lack of emotional attunement or understand­ing through experience­s with their caregiver(s) often develop ideas of the world that are based in fear and the need to form protection. This is the case even while parents provide children with the best experience­s and environmen­t possible.

This is due, in part, to the inter-generation­al transmissi­on of attachment behaviours. People generally parent as they have been parented. Early experience­s are part of the genetic makeup of the child: social epigenetic­ists have stated these experience­s “live under the skin.” Children are affected by early childhood experience­s throughout their lives.

Creating art helps children express their feelings and thoughts. It provides them the opportunit­y to imagine possibilit­ies, see and create alternativ­e scenarios that can open new ways to engage in their relationsh­ips and environmen­ts and to demonstrat­e resiliency.

TIPS FOR PARENTS

Create a child-friendly space that can get messy and allow for unabashed creativity. Provide your child with tools such as paper, crayons, plasticine, paint, glitter and allow them to freely explore and create. Some kids will enjoy sitting at a table and others will enjoy the floor. How they choose to create doesn’t matter, if the space supports their comfort, size, and creative style.

Stay close and follow your child’s lead. Doodle yourself and you might be surprised how much your child shares while creating. Older children and teens may like to work independen­tly but remain available; they may want to share ideas.

The art they create may look like something identifiab­le or it may not. Don’t worry about what it looks like, or whether it looks like anything at all. Self-expression is valid for its own sake.

Try not to pressure your child to create or to perform. Self-expression should feel good. Provide the tools and the space and let them express.

Provide positive feedback when they show you their work. Remember, this is the expression of their feelings and how they see themselves and the world. Don’t try to change or “improve” it. You might ask questions, beginning with something openended like: “This is beautiful, can you tell me about it?” You might wonder about a colour used or share the feeling it creates in you. Encourage sharing and talking about it. Allow them to experience pride, vulnerabil­ity, trust, and acceptance.

Be open. Art is a great way to express and share feelings and love with each other. Creating together can be a fun experience that builds trust and acceptance.

You might also find pediatrici­an and psychoanal­yst Donald Winncott’s Squiggle Game fun, which has the side benefit of seeing each other’s unique perspectiv­es, and likely prompting some chuckles.

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