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Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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extreme physical and sexual abuse.
Sara was not able to participate in the last sequence of mindfulness class
because she was too frightened to lie on the floor in the presence of other
people. Her understandable fear of lying down in public paralyzed her so that
she was unable to focus on anything else. Sara’s experience is not uncommon
in this setting and demonstrates clearly how painful emotions can interfere
with even the most basic activities.
The first challenge when working with Sara was to help her identify her
fear and view it – even for a fleeting moment – from the perspective of
a
friendly and impartial spectator
. Over a period of several weeks Susan
integrated the mindful process scram into her work with Sara. First, Susan
encouraged Sara to simply notice the fear when it occurred by
stopping
doing whatever she was doing when it happened. Period. There was no
expectation that She lie down or engage in another, less frightening, intro-
spective practice. It was enough for Sara to make the connection that her
fear was triggered by lying on the classroom floor.
Eventually Sara made that connection and was able to
calm
her body
and quiet her mind with breath awareness practices. Once she felt calmer,
she could
remember
that these emotions occurred every time the class
practiced introspection while lying down. By the end of the 12-week course,
Chapter 22 Mindfulness with Children
421
Sara was able to
act
mindfully and cautiously lie down with the rest of the
class with
metta
or kindness toward herself by understanding her feelings.
Sara was never able to close her eyes during the body scan, nor was she able
to physically relax. But she overcame her fear and lay on the floor with her
peers. Sara discovered the courage to do so by practicing mindfulness and
metta
.
The case of Sara illustrates an important caveat about working with chil-
dren suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder. The potential for flooding,
especially in classroom situations, must be taken seriously and mentors must
be trained in recognizing signs that flooding may be immanent. Safety and
flexibility are most important in clinical settings, as well. When attention
is destabilized by traumatic memories and strong emotions, the mentor can
support a child by helping turn their attention
away
from awareness of inner
feelings and toward awareness of the outer world.
Emotions Are Viewed as Visitors
To a child, a difficult emotion sometimes feels strong and solid, particularly in
the early years when children are concrete thinkers. Children can get stuck
in painful emotional states because they believe them to be permanent and
an inherent aspect of who they are. Children often become so caught up
in a feeling that they immediately act on it, unable to imagine that there
could be a more objective perspective. We have found the Buddhist teach-
ing of impermanence, that everything changes and nothing stays the same,
an extremely useful concept that children can easily recognize and under-
stand when embodied by their mentors. Mentors with a visceral understand-
ing of impermanence will model how to relate to emotions as impermanent
states, inside and out. Practicing mindfulness, children and their mentors see
together how emotions arise with each moment of experience, in a contin-
uously flowing, changing stream. Through relationship with a mentor who
sees through the lens of impermanence, children can learn to experience
difficult emotions as transient and situational, rather than a permanent con-
dition intrinsic to them.
One way that emotions are described in Buddhist psychology is as pass-
ing, or adventitious, visitors to the heart. Emotions are viewed as healthy
(leading to wise actions and happiness) or unhealthy (leading to unwise
expressions that bring unhappiness in their wake). We recognize that this
view of emotions is a simplification and propose it only as a practical
and therapeutic way of approaching complex emotional processes with
children who often find it easier to view psychological pain more clearly
if they personify the emotion.
Negative emotions that naturally accompany the inevitable painful aspects
of relational life can get blown out of proportion and become damaging
when children are left alone with them, or if their mentors get frightened or
angry when they don’t know how to help. Then both children and mentor
naturally try to avoid the emotions (to
scram
); thus giving them an authority
they don’t have. From the perspective of
scram
, it doesn’t matter whether
emotions are positive or negative, we work with both in the same mindful
way as. Simply the integrative, dynamic activity of the mind, an expression of
being alive. But when emotions are blown out of proportion, they obscure
awareness of both clear mind and its objects.
422
Trudy A. Goodman and Susan Kaiser Greenland
Personifying difficult emotions and the problems they cause as visitors,
albeit unwelcome ones, allows children and their mentors to consider many
aspects of mood, emotion and the possibility of their transformation by:
• Talking about emotions as impermanent, like guests who visit and then
leave. We cannot overemphasize the compassionate role of the mindful
mentor in helping children gently slow into their experience so they can
begin to identify their emotions, to stop themselves from acting them out,
and to see how they change.
• Experimenting with purposeful attention in the company of a mentor,
children may see that it is possible to have some control over how they
respond to their emotions. While children cannot choose their feelings,
with guidance and support, they can learn and practice new ways of
responding to them.
• Acknowledging we have a choice about how to entertain our visitors; a
child may not be able to prevent them from arriving, but with help, she
may choose whether to invite them to stay. This may open new possibil-
ities. Together with her mentor, a child can reflect about how long she
is willing to stay with this particular guest. For the time of a play date? A
sleepover? Does she let them move in, take over and cause problems? Or
even get in the way of growing up?
• Recognizing times when she is not bothered by unwelcome guests, where
she is able to relax and be herself. Acknowledging those times with her
mentor, even celebrating them together. These moments when nothing
else seems to be happening can be an opportunity for quiet non-verbal
sharing of attention and connection.
The quiet nonverbal sharing mentioned above describes an important way
of teaching mindfulness, without necessarily saying a word. Through atten-
tive, quiet presence, a mentor can
embody
mindfulness and model how
scram
can be used in real-life relationships. Embodied mindfulness may also
be an effective means by which a mentor becomes better attuned with (or
“felt by”) a child. From Dan Siegel, “As this joining evolves, we begin to
resonate with each other’s states and become changed by our connection.
Attunement can be seen as the heart of therapeutic change.” Attunement
is expressed in the safety, comfort, and relief a child may feel when seen
through a mentor’s eyes, as being whole and complete just as she is. By
accompanying, by staying with the child as all the child’s “visitors” come and
go, the mentor embodies trust in the child’s underlying, inherent clarity and
wisdom. As trust and attunement with the mentor deepen, a child may be
better able to integrate the mentor’s positive view and make it her own.
In the following example, Trudy models mindfulness in her response to a
boy’s provocative actions.
A 7-year-old boy, Xavier, was referred to psychotherapy for being opposi-
tional with teachers and fighting at school. Xavier was a perfectionist who
would angrily destroy his work if he made the slightest mistake. He came to
therapy clutching his after-school snack, a big box of Fruity Pebbles cereal.
He was bright and presented himself as friendly and playful. But the fun play
immediately broke down when he couldn’t have his way. He would regress
and become furious, expressing intense self-hatred. Inevitably, Xavier would
lose control and the cereal would suddenly fly all over the room. The first
Chapter 22 Mindfulness with Children
423
time it happened, he and Trudy both stopped, stunned. They looked at the
rug covered in multi-colored tiny pieces of cereal. Xavier was visibly fright-
ened by the aggression in his act of flinging the cereal around Trudy office.
He became defiant and hostile, daring her to get mad.
Just stopping and looking at the therapeutic space bedecked in colorful
fruity pebbles, Trudy understood why this tightly controlled little boy, an
only child who lived in an environment where no misstep went unnoticed
or unpunished, needed to let his precious snack fly all over the space. Sud-
denly it was funny, the office was a mess! It became a
scram
practice when
the cereal flew; they
stopped
, saw what was happening at the moment it
happened, and
calmed
down to
remember
that the mess was not a big deal.
After taking these first three steps, Xavier was able to
act
mindfully as they
swept up the cereal together with an attitude of kindness, understanding
why Xavier acted as he did.
Trudy’s stance of mindfulness and kindness allowed Xavier to feel safe
enough to talk about the beatings he received when he was “bad.” Trudy
and his school counselor found help for his mother and a therapy group
for Xavier, where he could work on improving relationships with peers and
develop self-regulating behaviors. This was a case where a mentor’s com-
passion, mindfulness and humor allowed a frightened, angry boy to express
his truth.
We understand that limits may need to be set for children to keep them
and their peers safe. By embodying mindfulness the mentor can both estab-
lish boundaries, and convey empathic attunement of a child just the way
she is, without needing to fix, rescue or change her. Together mentor and
child can use
scram
to help build the child’s capacity for self-compassion
and understanding.
Because children are deeply embedded in a
family system
, it is not surpris-
ing that the degree to which a child benefits from mindfulness-based therapy
is highly associated with the amount of parental involvement.
(Semple et al.,
2006.)
A parent’s capacity to reflect on her inner life, and the inner life of her child, can also be a significant predictor of the child’s security of attachment
to the parent
(Fonagy & Target, 1977).
Thus it is important to look at practicing mindfulness with children from a systems perspective and, whenever
possible, involve parents from the outset. In keeping with this approach a
pilot pediatric obesity study currently underway at University of California,
San Francisco, is delivered to the child through the adult caregiver (whether
overweight or not). The pilot intervention extends MB-EAT
3
(Kristeller & Hallett,
1999)
to children and parents, using
MB-EAT
and
InnerKids
programs adapted for this population. It is deliberately focused on preadoles-
cent children who are embedded in the family unit. Michele Meitrus-Snyder,
lead investigator of the study, is persuaded from limited pilot experience that
the mutual understanding gleaned through the shared mindfulness experi-
ence, fosters improved connections between parent and child that may be as
important as any other facet of the intervention.
(Mietus-Snyder et al., 2007).
3 MB-EAT is a mindfulness-based intervention for adults with binge eating disorders.
It was developed by Jean L. Kristeller, Department of Psychology, Indiana State Uni-
versity, Ruth Quillian-Wolever, Center for Integrative Medicine, Duke University and
their colleagues.
424
Trudy A. Goodman and Susan Kaiser Greenland
While the application of
scram
is simple and can be taught to the entire
family, the embodiment of this steady, gentle way of being is not easy. From
Buddhist meditation teacher and psychologist Jack Kornfield: “An important
part of mindfulness practice is being conscious of and taking responsibility
for
embodying
mindfulness through our own thoughts, feelings and actions”
(Kornfield, 2007).
Taking responsibility for your own mindfulness, learning to walk-the-walk, is the most effective way to transmit compassionate mindfulness skills to children.
If you are not already a practitioner, we recommend you gently introduce
yourself to mindfulness practice in order to get a felt sense of the experience.
Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn, who first taught and researched clinical applications of