The Sun (Lowell)

Stressors

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that are damaging to well-being and complicati­ng daily life,” the release states. “Too many families are overwhelme­d, under equipped and unraveling.”

The Mahoney Family Event Fund Committee was created by Tewksbury native Maureen Mahoney, who has devoted herself to helping others impacted by violence since her parents and brother were murdered in 1975.

Mahoney was on hand for Wednesday’s webinar, and spoke about the horrific experience she endured approximat­ely four and a half decades ago.

In was New Year’s Eve in 1975 when Mahoney arrived at her parents’ home on Whipple Road in Tewksbury and found her parents, Dr. Hugh and Ruth, as well as her brother John, shot to death. They were killed as part of a planned armed robbery, according to Mahoney, who was 21 at the time of the shooting.

The violent death of Mahoney’s loved ones provides an extreme example of toxic stress.

“The four perpetrato­rs that in

vaded our home had violent background­s,” Mahoney said. “Their criminal background­s started in their early teens. They came from homes rife with domestic violence and often egregious abuse. Research tells us the violence begets violence, just like peace begets peace. The behaviors learned, or rather copied at a young age, become deeply ingrained and these behaviors often become lifelong habits. Habits that are passed on from one generation to the next.”

The decision to organize Wednesday’s webinar was out of the concern that stress is taking hold of families, as the coronaviru­s pandemic has “upended any semblance of normalcy,” according to Mahoney.

As was shared by participan­ts during the webinar, the data suggests there has been an increase in domestic violence and abuse since the pandemic began.

“It’s critical to realize that if our environmen­ts, especially our home environmen­ts are continuall­y filled with adversity, tension, fear, they become very unhealthy places, and this often sets the stage for lifelong problems, including chronic disease, mental health issues, social anxieties,

addiction, depression,” Mahoney said.

According to statistics provided by Bernardi, a child is “abused or neglected every 11 to 12 minutes.

“We also know that when it comes to abuse, approximat­ely one in four girls and one in six boys is sexually abused,” Bernardi continued. “And those numbers vary somewhat over time as we learn more informatio­n and as more adults come forward and disclose, but what we do know is that in those cases, over 90% of the time, the abuser is someone the child knows. In a third of those cases, the abuser is another child.”

Bernardi discussed abuse prevention methods, which largely revolved around the importance of providing pathways of communicat­ion. She encouraged each person in the webinar to provide support to all parents they know and to become active in the lives of the children close to them, allowing the youth to feel comfortabl­e enough to approach them.

“We know when kids have trusted adults in their lives, that helps them to thrive and allows them to grow to be safe adults,”

Bernardi said.

Also speaking on Wednesday was Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan, who referenced a Boston Children’s Hospital study that suggested from July to October last year, there was a 47% increase in the number of adolescent­s requiring hospitaliz­ation for mental health issues.

“We are definitely seeing that, and although we’re pretty well resourced in a lot of areas in Massachuse­tts, children’s health is severely lacking,” Ryan said.

“Coupled with the racism pandemic we’ve been dealing with as well, I think kids have a lot of unaddresse­d fear right now that as parents, it’s our job … to give them a space to talk about that,” she added.

Also speaking on Wednesday was Dr. Nancy Rappaport, a child psychiatri­st at Harvard Medical School who delved into toxic stress and nurturing parents; and Fiona Jensen, the executive director of Calmer Choice, who provided meditation tools to promote well-being. The roughly 90-minute webinar also featured Koa Goode, a case manager supervisor at the Greater Lawrence Community Action Council, who addressed tools for

effective parenting stressful times.

“Think of when you come home from work and you’re tired and you just want to get in bed and unwind,” Goode said.

“So this is what you want to do. However, you get home and there’s cleaning to do, cooking to do, homework help, there are dogs barking, you have a headache. You want to rest, but your reality is you have to do. That space in between is stress. The space in between is unmet expectatio­ns.”

Goode encouraged webinar participan­ts to “take inventory” of how they are feeling from day to day, and to stay connected with family and friends with phone calls and virtual get-togethers. She encouraged people to practice empathy with their children, practice self care and to forgive themselves.

“If you forgot something, it’s OK, you’re human,” Goode said. “If you woke up late, it’s OK, you’re human. Adjust, regroup and move on.”

For more informatio­n about the Mahoney Family Event Fund and to watch a recording of Wednesday’s webinar, visit mahoneyfam­ilyfund.com.

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