You don't.. you don't tell them it was "just a bad dream". You just hold them and tell them you love them.
Prior to taking this placement, I had been told that both girls would carry on "from sun up to sun down" about monsters and the like. The girls would refuse to go to bed and were just inconsolable. However, we haven't had any issues with bedtime.. well not ANY.. but few issues. Yes, there are nightmares or night terrors (I am not an expert so I can't tell you the difference). Yes, there times when both girls would "carry on" but all it took was the comfort of a loving touch (holding, cuddling, rocking)... there are things that happened in their past that allow the "touch" to be sufficient comfort to them.
Our foster children have visits with their birth parents and they also have weekly phone calls. After a recent phone call, Big Girl woke up drenched in sweat and screaming/crying. She had a bad dream.. with monsters in it.
What did I do? I did not tell her that monsters weren't real.. because I am sorry if a child BELIEVES they exist.. they EXIST. I brought her downstairs.. and we sat at the kitchen table. And I asked her to draw her dream. She did.. I asked her to draw the monsters, because I needed to know what they looked like in case they ever tried to show up at my house. She obliged. Then, I brought her back to bed and asked her what she planned on dreaming about that would be happy dreams... she responded "Rainbows and Unicorns".
Just found the blog. This is heart breaking to think about. I'm glad you were able to help her have happy rainbow dreams.
ReplyDeleteMy daughter (adopted at birth) is 3 and tells me all the time she's afraid of something that is in the shadows. I know this is just a stage for her but as we get closer to becoming licensed foster parents I know that the children that come in to our home might come in with real monsters.