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"But when he gets home each day, Saliba
Smith takes a few minutes in his bedroom to sit calmly, spine straight,
and meditatea practice he learned from his yoga teacher, Shana
Meyerson."
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Better Homes And Gardens
February 2008
Less-Stressed Kids
10 ways to help your
child chill out
By Melody Warnick
Like most kids his age, 15-year-old Mason
Saliba Smith has a schedule that sounds like an anxiety attack on
paper. Classes at a competitive Los Angeles high school. A hectic
social scene to navigate. A barrage of tests to take every week.
But when he gets home each day, Saliba Smith takes a few minutes
in his bedroom to sit calmly, spine straight, and meditatea
practice he learned from his yoga teacher, Shana Meyerson. School
deals a lot of stress to me,, he says. After yoga, I
feel calm. And calm is what most tweens and teens arent
these days.One survey by the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's
Health found that more than half of 9- to 17-year-olds studied were
either moderately or highly stressed out. You cant eliminate
all stress, but you can help your child manage the pressure in healthy
ways, whether thats enrolling in a yoga class, making space
at home for meditation, or cutting down on all those after-school
commitments.
Life is going to be stressful, we cant protect our
kids from it, says Kenneth Ginsburg, M.D., author of A
Parents Guide to Building Resilience in Children and Teens.
A parent's challenge is to raise children with a wide repertoire
of coping strategies. Here's help doing that.
[1] Allow downtime
As much as it may pain you to see your teen lying on her bed like
a slug, let her--time to unwind after school protects mental health.
For teenagers, downtime is productive because theyre
thinking about their day, figuring things out, says Roni Cohen
Sandler, Ph.D., author of Stressed-Out Girls: Helping Them Thrive
in the Age of Pressure. They have to go through that to
recharge. Talk with your child about her preferences for after-school
unwind time, and hold off on homework and chore demands until later.
Make sure your child has a couple days each week free of after-school
activities. The empty afternoons allow time for homework and play,
so kids are less stressed the rest of the week.
[2] Break problems into pieces
An overwhelming to-do list can paralyze your kid. Help him turn
the mountain into a series of molehills. With younger children,
that can mean dividing a spelling list into five words to memorize
nightly. Older teens might need help organizing tasks for a major
research paper, so work together to set priorities.
[3] Pencil in family dinners
Studies have shown that spending even 20 minutes sharing a meal
as a family three or four nights a week keeps kids and parents connected
and communicative, which in turn makes children more resilient to
the negative effects of stress. If dinner is usually a no-go at
your house, breakfast, lunch or weekly family movie nights also
fill the bill.
[4] Brainstorm mini vacations
Ask your child, If you had just 10 spare minutes a day, what
would you do to really relax? Post a list of ideas like petting
the dog, emailing a friend, or re-reading Harry Potter. When shes
had a high-stress day at school, encourage her to take a 10-minute
vacation before she does anything else.
[5] Play games
According to Carl Arinoldo, a child psychologist and author of Essentials
of Smart Parenting: Learning the Fine Art of Managing Your Children,
some video and computer games in moderation can actually help reduce
stress. Word or puzzle games that requires intense concentration,
such as Tetris, Bookworm, Bejeweled, Chuzzle and Peggle, will engross
your teen enough to put other pressures momentarily out of mind.
[6] Do guided imagery
At mini yogis, a Los Angeles yoga studio for kids, owner Shana Meyerson
leads children through an imagined sensory experience. I say,
Were walking through the park. What does the grass feel
like on your feet? Can you feel the sunshine and the breeze? Were
eating ice cream now. What does it taste like? Have
your child picture someplace in nature that she lovesthe beach,
the mountains, a garden. Focusing on the soothing mental image will
help him relax.
[7] Protect sleep
Experts recommend nine hours of sleep a night for teens, but high
school seniors average under seven. Work with your child to limit
late-night studying, try to enforce an earlier bedtime, and sneak
in some restorative daytime sleep. Try the Power Nap Kit for Teens
($24.99; AtPeaceMedia.com). It comes with a CD of guided-imagery
tracks to help your child fall asleep faster; a bell chimes after
30 minutes so he can get back to the books.
[8] Take the bite out of tests
Teach tweens some instant calm-downs to use before tests, like those
used by Susan Kaiser Greenland, director of InnerKids Foundation,
a California nonprofit that teaches mindfulness to schoolchildren.
For instance, have kids imagine that theyre enclosing themselves
in an invisible bubble, where classmates cant bother them.
If something does distract them, tell them to pretend theyre
putting the stray thought into a balloon and watching it blow away.
[9] Shift priorities
Naturally youre thrilled when your child brings home a stellar
grade on a book report. But instead of focusing on the outcome,
focus on the effort by praising hard work. Then follow up by asking
such questions as, Whats the most interesting thing
you learned in class this week? or What do you like
about the novel youre reading now? By making children
proud of their own accomplishments and turning their attention to
the joys of learning, youll nurture their natural desire to
excel.
[10] Devise a less-stressful school schedule
Despite the pressure to go all out at his competitive Palo Alto,
California, high school, Zev Karlin-Neumann, 18, opted for only
one Advanced Placement class his junior year. He quickly dropped
another class as a senior when he realized it added too much work
to an already heavy load. Parents are crucial in reviewing a child's
workload, and teaming up with a school couselor can help create
a schedule that won't overwork a student yet keep him on track for
college--a strategy that worked for Zev, now a freshman at Stanford.
I knew what my limits were," he said. In the end, that
may be the greatest stress-buster of all.
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