Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
Tags: #0071596909
weeks and bad weeks, and even good years followed by bad weeks.
Separation anxiety has common themes and typical symptoms, but
it shows up differently in every child.
It can be bewildering to parents when their child shifts from con-
fi dence to anxiety and back again many times during the growing-up
years, but this unpredictable behavior is actually very normal. Gain-
ing the maturity and skills to handle many different kinds of separa-
tion with confi dence is a process, not a single event.
Professional-Speak
“A preschooler’s unwillingness to leave a parent or other
beloved adult is a good sign that important attachments have
developed. Many experts believe this capacity is a prerequi-
site for a healthy personality and a satisfying adulthood.”
—The National Parent Information Network
12 The No-Cry Separation Anxiety Solution
Is Something Wrong if a Child
Doesn’t
Have
Separation Anxiety?
Some children seem to learn early on that any adult can provide the
safety and security they need. These kids are remarkably fl exible and
don’t present any separation anxiety problems. They adapt seamlessly
from one new experience to another and make friends of all ages eas-
ily. The biggest issue with these fearless kids is teaching them enough
“Stranger Danger” lessons to prevent them from wandering off with
a friendly stranger at the park or shopping mall.
Some children don’t have any outward demonstration of separa-
tion anxiety—but they have the feelings nonetheless. While crying,
clinging children can be a frustration, silent, suffering children can
present a real challenge, since their anxiety can simmer quietly or in
ways that are harder to identify.
Almost all children feel some anxiety when facing a new situa-
tion, just as all adults feel some anxiety when starting the fi rst day at
a new job or moving into a new neighborhood. Therefore, it can be
helpful to read over the ideas presented in this book and apply some
of the solutions even with a child who doesn’t present any obvious
Daddy Kariem and Kairo, sixteen months old
All About Separation Anxiety in Early Childhood
13
need. For example, having a specifi c good-bye routine is helpful to all
children, regardless of their anxiety status.
If you have more than one child, it is highly possible that they are
all different: you may have one child who has no anxiety, one who has
silent symptoms, and yet another who exhibits many outward signs of
anxiety. This is a character personality trait that is inborn and then
shaped by various outside infl uences, only some of which originate
with parents. So in a family with many children, you often see vary-
ing degrees and types of anxiety among them. That’s why it is critical
for parents and caregivers to examine each individual child’s needs,
so they can give whatever help that particular child needs to combat
feelings of separation anxiety.
Keep Your Child Emotionally Safe
Parents can become entrenched in their own interpretation of their
child’s behavior. They witness outrageous behavior—like screaming
or tantrums over seemingly ridiculous events, such as a visit from a
loving grandparent—and don’t really understand what’s happening.
It can help to consider the situation from a child’s point of view:
• Children don’t
choose
to have separation anxiety.
• Children don’t enjoy having separation anxiety.
• Children wish they didn’t have separation anxiety.
• Children don’t know how to get rid of their separation
anxiety.
Separation anxiety is a feeling that comes on children unbid-
den and won’t leave easily. Since the feelings are there, it’s a helpful
beginning for your child to know that you understand. It can be reas-
suring to your child to know that what he feels is normal and that
you love him and believe in him even when he struggles, even when
he cries, and even when his behavior makes your life diffi cult.
There are times, of course, when your frustration will show itself in
your words and actions; you are human too, after all. Forgive yourself
those mistakes and work on sending an overall message of love, sup-
port, and acceptance of his feelings. That doesn’t mean you should
14 The No-Cry Separation Anxiety Solution
allow your child to control your life with his anxious behavior, nor
does it mean you shouldn’t try to help him let go when he needs to.
It means that when you do, you are sensitive and kind in the way you
approach his feelings.
If Separation Anxiety Is a Sign of Love and
Security, Should I Force Separation?
Separations represent developmental opportunities, but they are only
one piece of the massive jigsaw puzzle that is early childhood. Any
one separation situation does not make or break your child for life.
Any one time that you choose to proceed or to bypass a situation of
separation does not create a lifetime affect. It is the accumulation of
many such situations that takes your child on a journey from being a
totally dependent and attached newborn all the way to his wedding
day.
Timing is important when you forge ahead with separation. There
are moments when pushing for separation serves no productive pur-
pose and simply creates a fl ood of upset in the family. Other times
are ripe for new separation situations, and while they may start out
shaky, they blossom into wonderful learning experiences.
By gently encouraging your child’s separation confi dence at the
right times and in the right ways, you can teach him valuable life les-
sons like these:
• How to fi nd ways to control his emotions in diffi cult situations
• How to handle his emotions about missing the people that he
loves
• How to know that people love him even when they are not
with him
• How to use positive self-talk to convince himself to do things
even when he has worries
• How to persist in unfamiliar or uncomfortable situations
despite emotional challenges or fears
• How to use past successes as evidence that he is capable of
overcoming fears and forging ahead
• How to accept that he is good company for himself
All About Separation Anxiety in Early Childhood
15
Emotions and Situations That Masquerade as
Separation Anxiety
A number of emotions and situations can make it seem that your
child is suffering from separation anxiety because the symptoms are
similar. It’s helpful to review the following list to determine if any of
these situations fi t your child’s experiences. It is possible that your child could have
both
the described emotion
and
separation anxiety, but only you can determine the part that such situations play in your
child’s case. It is easy to misread a child’s response, so you can make
the most accurate determination by keeping an open mind.
•
Lifestyle changes.
A change in a child’s way of life might bring
about symptoms that appear to be separation anxiety but really aren’t.
For example, while fear of sleeping alone can be a symptom of separa-
tion anxiety, not all children who are afraid to sleep alone actually
have separation anxiety. Children who have regularly co-slept with
their parents or siblings may simply be accustomed to sleeping with
another person and fi nd it unsettling when they are required to sleep
alone. Ideas for moving from co-sleeping to independent sleep can be
found on my websit
e (www.nocrysolution.com) o
r in any of my NoCry books on the topic of sleep.
•
Lack of experience or slow adaptation.
If your child has never
been left with a babysitter, never experienced a playdate, or had little
exposure to new people, then these situations can rightly cause some
uncertainty. In these cases, you are dealing with a lack of familiarity
rather than separation anxiety, and practice plus patience during the
adjustment is what is most required.
•
Shyness.
When your preschooler hides his face in your side
and refuses to say a polite “hello” to your friend, your toddler turns
away from the cheerful cashier offering a free sticker, or your baby
cries when an unfamiliar aunt tries to pick her up, you may attribute
this behavior to separation anxiety or stranger anxiety. However, it
may just be a shy child who is uncomfortable around new people or
who is more reserved or slower to warm up in social situations.
•
Fear.
A child who clings tightly to you if you try to leave him
alone in a dark bedroom, a toddler who refuses to leave your side to
climb on the playground toys, or an older child who refuses to join
16 The No-Cry Separation Anxiety Solution
a sports team or ride his bike to school—these are all examples of
children who may have fears that appear to be separation anxiety.
Fear of the dark, monsters, the unknown, or being hurt can make it
appear that your child doesn’t want to separate from you, but what
he’s looking for is protection from the object of his trepidation—and
that protection is you. By helping him fi nd ways to feel safe as he ventures out into the world, you can help him overcome these fears.
•
Worry.
Your child may hear a news story about an airplane
crash, a missing person, a war, or another disaster. He might talk to a
friend whose parents recently divorced or whose grandparent passed
away. At these times, he may suddenly fi nd that he can’t control his
worries about you when you are out of sight—so his solution is to stay
by you at all times. If this is your situation, talk to your child about
his concerns. Explain all the steps you take to keep yourself safe.
Allow him to call you or send a text message when possible. If you
stay calm and reassuring, this phase should pass.
•
Embarrassment.
Your previously happy kindergartener sud-
denly begs to stay home from school. Your preschooler won’t leave
your side to ask the librarian she’s talked to many times before to
help her fi nd a book. Your grade-schooler refuses to answer a simple
“How are you?” from a neighbor. In these cases, embarrassment or
awkwardness may be to blame.
Ask a few “why” questions to determine if something has hap-
pened to make your child feel uncomfortable. Perhaps someone
laughed at a question she asked, or she got lost on the way back from
the school library to her classroom. If you can learn what is causing
the embarrassment, you can bring it out into the open. When you
provide reassurance that her experience is normal and help her with
tips on how she can overcome her feelings, you can move her past
the discomforting incident.
Is Your Child’s Separation Anxiety Really
a Problem?
There are times when children must separate from their parents, but
there are also times when separation is
optional.
I have never seen any
All About Separation Anxiety in Early Childhood
17
Mother-Speak
“I’m a teacher and on a school holiday break I wanted to
spend the extra time with my son, but due to advice from oth-
ers, I decided to leave him in daycare. Friends told me how
lucky I was to have this ‘time to myself.’ I really struggled with
dropping Luke off and was nearly overwhelmed with feelings
of sadness—and some guilt too. I felt like all the things that I’d
planned to do seemed a bit pointless. I didn’t really enjoy the
‘time off’ at all, so I ended up changing plans and keeping him
with me. It was a glorious week for both of us. Now I’ll be
much more careful about automatically taking others’ advice
about what’s right for us.”
—Mother of three-year-old Luke
studies that support pushing a parent-child partnership to separate just
for the sake of personal growth. Every child is unique, and every family
is the only one of its kind. The treatment of separation anxiety should
require an individual decision for each child and for each situation.
This book, like all my No-Cry parenting books, is about solving