Seeing Red by Jennifer Simmonds and A Volcano in My Tummy by Elaine Whitehouse & Warwick Pudney Anger is a very normal emotion. It's a gift if we can teach our children to be aware of anger and how to process it, especially during stressful life events like a divorce. These books help with just that. It's normal for a child to be angry at one or both parents. It's not ok to let that anger go unattended, even if it isn't directed at you. Anger hurts and limits perspective. Anger makes your child unhappy in the long run and ruins relationships now and in the future. What I found helpful from these books was to help children to identify the following:
It's OK to feel angry BUT - Don't hurt others Don't hurt yourself Don't hurt property DO talk about it. Thich Nhat Hanh tells children: "Think of your anger as your little baby brother or sister. No matter what your baby brother or sister has done, you need to treat him or her with tenderness and love, in the same way that a mother comforts her crying baby...When we take care of our anger like this, we are being "mindful." Mindfulness acts just like the rays of the sun. Without any effort the sun shines on everything and everything changes because of it. When we expose our anger to the light of mindfulness, it will change too, like a flower opening to the sun." From A Pebble for Your Pocket Of course all of this instruction will likely fall on deaf ears if the techniques are not modeled by the teacher. The best thing for the children is for the parents to process their anger. Until that happens, the children are unlikely to find relief. |
