Counseling
can be as beneficial to children as it can for adults and it can help them
develop healthy behaviors and coping skills. In some cases, counseling can even
prevent serious behavior problems in life.
If you have any familiarity with the counseling profession, then you
acknowledge that childhood can be a very stressful period of life for many
people. The therapists at L&B
Counseling are here to help and provide counseling
services for children and families. Counseling
can help children deal with many different stressful life situations, from
coping with learning disabilities to adjusting to their parents’ divorce and
getting along with stepparents.
If you
are concerned about your child’s behavior or perceived emotional state, there
is no wrong reason to seek counseling.
The following are just some of the reasons that children go to counseling:
·
Physical
or sexual abuse
·
Bullying
·
Learning
difficulties
·
Parents’
separation or remarriage
·
Death
or illness of a close family member
·
Other
traumatic or very stressful family situation, such as a parent going to jail or
a military parent being deployed
·
Physical
symptoms (such as headaches or stomachaches) for which no physical cause can be
found and therefore which might be physical manifestations of emotional stress
What Counseling Is Not
Counseling
is not an attempt to change or fix who a child is. It is not about labeling the child a problem
and isolating him or her from normal activities of childhood. It is not like taking a misbehaving child out
of class and sending him to the principal’s office. As Robert Brault said, “A child seldom needs a good
talking to as a good listening to.” The purpose of counseling for children
is to be a process by which a child learns healthy behaviors and learns to
advocate for himself or herself. It
focuses on setting and achieving goals, and not on making the child feel
ashamed or on assigning blame and deciding which adults are and are not
responsible for the child’s troublesome behavior.
Play Therapy for Young Children
Some
forms of therapy used in counseling for adults, such as talk therapy and
cognitive behavioral therapy, require a high level of verbal skills and
sophisticated thought which young children do not possess. Therefore, one of the most common techniques
used in counseling for
children ages 11 and younger is play therapy. The therapist observes the fictional
scenarios that children act out while they play and uses this as a starting
point to gain insight into the stresses and fears that the child is not yet
able to articulate. In addition to the
diagnostic applications of play therapy, this type of therapy can also be used
to gradually desensitize children to situations that are a source of anxiety and stress
for them.
Warning Signs
If you
sense that your child is suffering from emotional problems but your child does
not want to talk to you about them, you are not alone. It is very common for children not to want to
open up to their parents about things that are bothering them. If you see your child exhibiting worrisome
behaviors, it is a good idea to bring your child to a counselor. These warning signs include:
·
Lack
of interest in school or change for the worse in academic performance
·
Self-harming
behavior such as cutting
·
Marked
change in eating habits
·
Persistent
aggressive and violent behavior
L&B Counseling Can Help
At L&B
counseling, our counselors treat each child as a person and an individual. We understand that there are no one size fits
all counseling services.