Birth Trauma: A Cultural Blind Spot

The Pre and Perinatal Psychology Perspective

If I were to walk into a room of mothers and declare that it was complete nonsense that birth was painful I would expect the response to be one of outrage and anger. Yet the idea that birth may be painful for the baby as well as the mother carries very little weight. As most of the pain for mothers is caused by the contact between the baby, especially the head and shoulders of the baby, with the cervix and the bones of the maternal pelvis, it is surprising that so little attention is given to the experience of the baby and what the consequences of that may be. This is especially true when we consider how soft and thin the bones of the baby’s cranium are. That babies are deeply affected by the way they are born and that this has profound consequences throughout life is, in my experience, a reality I have come to accept without reserve.

My concern here is not with how birth ‘should’ or ‘should not’ be. More than enough men have interfered in a process that in traditional cultures has been the exclusive territory of women. My concern is to advocate for the babies whose voices are not heard and to draw attention to the cultural blind spot that exists around the ways in which birth and our womb experience shape our sense of who we are and the kind of world we live in. Pre and Perinatal Psychology is a relatively unknown branch of psychology, which is concerned with this earliest of experience. Over the past few decades a growing body of evidence has emerged from a variety of sources, such as ultrasound data, foetal origins research, consciousness studies, field theory and cellular biology that give credence to the experiences of psychotherapists, body workers and other practitioners in their clinical work with clients where very early memories emerge[1].

My own interest in the subject emerged out of my work as a Craniosacral Therapist and psychotherapist. In my craniosacral training I was taught to identify and work with the structural consequences of ‘birth trauma’, but not the experiential content. Whilst this was forthcoming in my work with adults, it became clear to me that babies were also expressing experience through body language and crying that was obviously not related to present moment needs. In essence babies were telling me their story and although I could follow some of it there were certainly things I was missing. This led me to travel to Switzerland to work with Karlton Terry, founder of the Institute for Pre and Perinatal Education and later to organise courses and teach with him in Britain. Through working with Karlton I was able to access and resolve much of my own pre and perinatal trauma and deepen my understanding of what babies are communicating. At first the depth of understanding that I saw Karlton bring to his clinical work with babies seemed magical and humbling. In time I was able to integrate what I was learning into my own work, which brought a new depth to my work both with babies and adults.

The Internal World of the Baby

We all hold experience in our bodies and the concept of ‘body memory’ is well known to many body-oriented practitioners. As we grow we are not educated or encouraged to pay attention to our internal world of sensations and images. As cognitive understanding becomes the priority we lose touch with the flow of embodied experience that also informs us, until it becomes like a whisper in the shadows, rather than the rich source of awareness and sensitivity it might otherwise be. Babies are deeply immersed in their embodied experience, which is immediate and vital. They do not have concepts or social mores to distract them and express what they feel without inhibition. This takes the form of what Karlton calls ‘baby body language’ and a whole range of emotional expressions from radiant joy to intense despair. It is as babies that we begin to learn what is acceptable and not acceptable as we are distracted from certain experiences and rewarded for others. It is not incidental that we tend to call calm babies ‘good’. However, a calm baby is not always a content baby. She may also be a baby who has given up on the empathic response she is seeking.

It is well documented that babies thrive on empathy. They respond to facial expressions and tones of voice like partners in a dance. What is less understood is that as well expressing present moment needs babies also need us to respond to the experience they are holding in their bodies, which is left over from their birth or womb life. This is the body memory which babies are much more in contact with than most of us are as adults. One of the reasons that babies often cry when they are tired or at a certain time in the evening, is because they are no longer being distracted and begin to feel their embodied experience more acutely. We may also experience this to some degree as adults as we relax or drift into sleep. We start to become aware of aches and pains that we did not notice in the day. We experience flashbacks of arguments or other disturbing events. We may feel anxiety as concerns that had become lost during the day suddenly resurface. Babies are just the same, except that they do not have the story in words, only in sensation and image.

 

Needs Crying and Memory Crying

One of the most useful clinical skills I learnt from Karlton was to distinguish between ‘needs crying’ and ‘memory crying’. Needs crying is when a baby is expressing a present moment need, such as being hungry, uncomfortable, over-stimulated, under-stimulated or tired. These are basic needs and when they are met the crying stops. Memory crying is when the baby is experiencing sensations and images that relate to an earlier experience, such as a moment in the birth that was overwhelming. This type of crying is associated with repetitive body movements, such as frantically pushing or ‘paddling’ with the legs or swiping an area of the head or pulling an ear again and again. These movements are sometimes expressing an impulse that got blocked, such as the attempt to push through the birth canal that became overwhelmed by anaesthetic coming through the umbilical cord. It may indicate a place where the cranium became compressed by a pelvic bone or the baby became disoriented and lost. There are times in the birth process where babies do not know if they are going to survive. They are being crushed under intense pressure, flooded by stress hormones or drugs through the umbilical cord or deprived of oxygen as the cord gets compressed during the contractions. Babies express the powerful emotions that any of us would associate with such intense experiences; rage, panic, sadness, disorientation.

Babies feel silenced when memory crying is responded to as if it were needs crying. After awhile they may learn to give up on expecting empathy and this resignation can be mistaken for contentment, as the baby appears calm. Imagine the following scenario. You are coming home one day and you are accosted by a stranger who pushes you into an alleyway and threatens to hit you if you do not hand over your money. You hand over what you have and he shoves you backwards so you fall roughly to the floor. Scared and disoriented you slowly get up, orienting to your environment to see that he has gone. Seeing that he has made off you begin to shake, but your first thought is to get to safety. So pulling yourself together you make your way home. As you come though your front door you see your partner, who turns to greet you. Your feelings begin to well up and you start to shake and cry. What you need more than anything at the moment is to tell your story and have your partner listen. Imagine that, if instead of listening, your partner told you to ‘shush’ and thrust a doughnut into your mouth.  If this were to happen enough times you would give up trying to tell your story. Initially you might feel absolutely furious, but in time you would become resigned and swallow back your feelings. On the surface you might seem very calm, but underlying that there would be a great deal of stress and resentment cycling inside you.

This situation is analogous to the babies who are memory crying and are responded to with a breast thrust into the mouth or insistent shushing. Where the analogy breaks down is that we would have to be ridiculously insensitive to misconstrue the cues of the adult partner who is expressing distress after a traumatic situation. As parents with a crying baby we are often confused and don’t know how to respond. We have only ever been taught that babies cry because they are hungry or need to have a nappy change. We have never been told that babies communicate to us about the stresses and traumas they have encountered during birth and that empathic listening can help them release that stress. Karlton stresses the value of ‘accurate empathy’. This may come in the form of mirroring a body movement and acknowledging what you are seeing and hearing the baby express. For example, ‘You look really sad now’ or ‘I can hear how angry you are.’ Babies feel when we are meeting them with accurate empathy. Baby body language is very exact and, with training, it is possible to identify the exact stage in the birth process that the baby is telling us about.

 

Supporting Parents

One of the most important factors of working in this way in clinical practice is to help parents to understand the difference between needs crying and memory crying. It asks of them a huge paradigm shift. Another clinical consideration is the tolerance threshold of the parents. It is hard for parents to listen to their baby’s story as it is often painful and makes parents aware of how hard the birth process was for their baby. Yet it is the listening to and acknowledgment of the pain that allows the baby to let go of it. I have seen this happen so many times in clinical practice I do not doubt its efficacy. As babies release stress their bodies soften and they are able to inhabit their bodies more fully. Many symptoms such as colic, which is often simply misunderstood memory crying, disappear as the underlying trauma resolves. Repetitive behaviours and body movements that were cues to pay attention are no longer expressed, as the attention has been given.

Helping parents to read baby body language and the emotional nuances of their baby’s expressions awakens a new depth of appreciation for many parents of the innate wisdom of their baby. What seemed incomprehensible now makes sense. Involving parents in the process and working with their permission every step of the way empowers them and engenders the confidence and awareness to continue supporting their baby outside of the sessions. As symptoms diminish and communication becomes easier the family bonds deepen. The confusion and tension that is created by a baby who cries for no apparent reason, puts a huge strain on family life. Constant crying disrupts relationships between parents and babies and between other family members. It puts huge pressure on parents and creates a great deal of anguish as parents try their best to meet present moment needs but nothing seems to help. No-one has ever told them about memory crying and they are at a loss for what to do, which generates a sense of helplessness and undermines parental confidence.

 

The Consequences of Unresolved Trauma

It is hard to acknowledge the pain that babies go through to get here. This may be one of the reasons that it is so hard for us to look at birth trauma. Yet if we do not look at it we leave babies to carry it on their own. Perhaps another reason we find it so hard to look at birth trauma is because it touches our own unresolved pain. This operates on many different levels; physical, emotional and psychological. On the physical level if we do not resolve the birth patterns, which may involve compressive and rotational forces held in the body, we grow into them. Although we adapt around these tensions to some degree, the adaptive patterns themselves introduce new strains into the body. As we grow older this interweave of birth and compensatory patterns create a myriad of health problems. The most obvious of these that crop up in my work are back problems, migraines and headaches, dental issues, muscle tensions and a myriad of organ dysfunctions. Unresolved trauma also acts within the nervous system, sensitising it to stress that evokes survival responses based on early overwhelm, rather than at a level appropriate to the present moment issue. Childbirth pioneer Dr. Michel Odent likens this to a thermostat that has been set too low so that it comes on when it is not needed. (Odent 1986) This tends to make emotional self-regulation difficult and creates ongoing problems in relationships with others. It is often at times when we are under pressure or going through a transition of some kind that these survival responses are most readily stimulated. These may include separating out from mother in infancy, going to nursery or school for the first time, puberty, leaving or moving home, new jobs and relationships etc.

The psychological consequences of unresolved birth trauma are also woven into our lives in numerous ways. Babies who felt disempowered by a medical intervention may grow up to feel disempowered in the world. Babies who felt an intervention as invasive may resent and reject help later in life or become extremely anti-authoritarian. Those of us who felt rescued by an intervention may develop a life long tendency to want to be rescued by others when we feel under pressure. But it is not just interventions that set up these attitudes and beliefs. At various stages in an intervention free birth babies have intense stressful experiences that can set up strong beliefs about the world and who they are in the world. One of the reasons for this is because the nervous system tends to make more neurological connections around events that we experience as stressful or life threatening, as it prioritises us being able to identify and predict danger later on, thereby maximising our chances of survival. The upside of this is that it lays down the foundations for skills and attitudes that may be very useful for us. The downside is that these attitudes may run us in an unconscious way that does not always serve us and limits our capacity to develop other skills or make other more appropriate choices. It is important to realise that these are not theoretical considerations, but very real issues that come up in the therapy room when working with adults.  Many therapists, including myself, did not begin our careers thinking that birth had such a profound impact on us. Our clients led us to that conclusion, we did not lead them.

However it is important to realise that early trauma is not simply the product of the birth. Birth is just one event, albeit an extremely important one, in a continuum of experience. How we are related to and communicated with in the womb sets its own emotional tone. How we are listened to after we are born is as important, if not more important than what the birth itself was like. If we are listened to with accurate empathy we are able to release tension and clear stress hormones out of our bodies. If we are listened to we develop self-esteem. We know that the world considers us worth listening to and that it can meet our needs to be heard. The great gift of acknowledging birth trauma is that we also recognise babies as conscious human beings, who have experience and communicate that experience to us.

As I have worked with these early processes in my practice over the years I have come to feel that much of the low self-worth and sense of being bad or wrong that so many of us carry is due to the lack of awareness of how conscious we are in the womb and at birth.  We need to be held in consciousness to trust that we are okay and the world is okay. Traditional cultures have long known what Pre and Perinatal Psychology is discovering in our modern age. In Tibetan culture, for example, ‘before conception, or preconception, couples prepare themselves in many ways. It is an important time to prepare body, emotions, mind and spirit so that all is in readiness to invite a child into the womb.’(Maiden and Farwell, 1997, p.13) When the Dalai Lama first began to meeting Western psychologists he was ‘completely puzzled at the notion of low self-esteem that he kept hearing about. It was utterly foreign to him.’ (Epstein, 2001, p.84)

According to Sobonofu Some of the West African tribe the Dagara, ‘Most people around the world don’t think about the possibility of children being so highly sensitive and easily influenced at such an early stage of life, but they certainly are – even while they are in the womb. In fact, most think that when children are hurt they will not remember it when they grow up. On the contrary, children will store all the hurt and have a hard time healing later on in life unless these wounds are addressed earlier in life.’ (Some, 2009, p.59) Listening to memory crying and hearing the painful birth story of babies is addressing these wounds. It is not easy listening, but, in the long run, it is easier than not listening.

 

Matthew Appleton is a registered craniosacral therapist and psychotherapist working in Bristol. He is the director of Conscious Embodiment Trainings, which he founded to promote awareness of pre and perinatal consciousness. His book A Free Range Childhood. Self-Regulation at Summerhill School based on his experiences as a houseparent at the famous democratic school founded by A.S. Neill has been published in several languages.

With a long term belief in the need to protect the inherent nature of the child, Matthew has lectured and run workshops internationally for over 20 years. He is also co-director of the Institute of Craniosacral Studies and a member of the International Society for Pre and Perinatal Psychology and Medicine.

www.matthew-appleton.co.uk www.conscious-embodiment.co.uk

 

Bibliography

Epstein, Mark. ‘Dharma and Psychology’ in Tricycle. The Buddhist Review. The Buddhist Ray Inc. 2001

Maiden, Anne Hubbell & Farwell, Edie. The Tibetan Art of Parenting. From Before Conception Through Early Childhood. Wisdom Publications. 1997

Odent, Michel. Primal Health. A Blueprint for Our Survival. Century. 1986

Some, Sobonfu. Welcoming Spirit Home. Ancient African Teaching to Celebrate Children and Community. Healing Wisdom Well. 2009

 


[1] A good overview of the literature can be found at the website of the Association of Pre and Perinatal Psychology and Health (APPPAH) at www.birthpsychology.com

The Joy of Parenting – Vanessa Anstee

I remember having my first daughter back in 2000.  It was a moment of absolute joy, pride and in the moment pleasure.  It was followed quickly by anxiety.  How do I get it right?  Am I doing it ok?  Is my daughter going to be happy?  Am I going to be good enough?

Since that moment I’ve been on a journey with lots of twist and turns.  I remember a fabulous midwife saying to me that your first child is your testing ground.  You try everything out and you don’t yet know what works.

When I think back over what I’ve learnt so far in my 10 years as a parent, the one thing that I think serves me most is something that I’ve learnt really recently.

I had ended up in a full time demanding job with two children and a husband that was self employed and just starting out.

I felt stuck and depressed.  I was overwhelmed with the sense that I had to be in this job while my husband got to be the fun dad.  He picked them up from school, took them places, jumped on the trampoline with them while I just worked more.  I paid the mortgage, I bought the food, I bought a new car and nothing was working for me.

I felt like I wasn’t in my life even though outwardly I looked really successful.  My coach helped me to look really hard at what I wanted and where I was being a victim.  Enough was enough and I decided to quit the corporate life, which was a huge step at the time when money was definitely going to be scarce.

I also decided to do a 10 month long leadership programme which took me for four week long retreats in California.  There I was stretched, pulled, loved and challenged all at the same time and I came to realise the one thing that I was missing.

I re-learnt who I was as Vanessa and as a mother.  I learnt how I show up for people and how I withdraw when I am feeling anxious.  I poured my life through this leadership model and I learnt a new way of being with myself that I now practice every day.

I learnt two key things: nothing is personal and I am good enough just as I am.  I think they are two really important things for parenting that if we really step into them, are really freeing.

Let’s take a look at nothing’s personal.  It’s not personal when your children don’t want to do their homework or when they scream at you in frustration.  It’s not personal when they have a temper tantrum or when they ask you why you have grey hair or a flabby tummy.  It’s equally not personal when they tell you you’re wonderful or when they say how great you look.  It just is how it is.  It’s about what’s going on for them in that moment.  So what that means for us is that we neither have to react to what we perceive as negative or positive.  We don’t need positive strokes to be who we are because we know that’s just about feeding our egos.

 

It’s a really empowering place to be when we really take on board that nothing is personal.  It means that we can be with so much more.  We can be with our children’s defensiveness without making it wrong.  Or we can be with their frustration without labelling it as lazy.

It’s a practice that goes hand in hand with the other aspect “I am enough”.  One of the things that I forgot when I became a parent was “ it’s ok to fail”.  In my head I had to be perfect or certainly as good as my own mother and those other mothers around me.   What that meant was that I couldn’t show my vulnerability.  I couldn’t reach out when I was feeling frustrated or I couldn’t share that I was scared or even ask for help.

What that frustration caused was irritation in me.  It wasn’t about anyone else it was about my annoyance that I had set it up that each day I had to get it right and be perfect and of course each day I failed in some way.  I would set out with the intention of being Mother Earth and by six o’clock I’d be dying for a glass of wine and yelling that they should just do what I say and get into the bath.

What was worse was of course, the great big guilt trip that I would lay on myself for not meeting my expectation and that I was the only mother in the world that shouted out of frustration.

I’d read books to teach me more skills and then watch Super Nanny to either console myself that I wasn’t as bad as that or convince myself that if only I used the naughty step all would be well.

The release from this cycle comes in knowing that I am enough.  I am perfectly imperfect and I openly vulnerable.  I admit to my children when I get it wrong or fail and I apologise when I need to.  This gives them permission to fail, forgive themselves and get back up again.

I am also learning to practice gratitude each day.  I think of 3 things I am grateful for and it shifts my perspective.  I realise the joy in my parenting rather than the failures.

Vanessa Anstee is a personal empowerment and leadership coach, wife and mum to Amelia aged 10 and Madeleine aged 6.

Vanessa runs The Sunshine Factory, a five-week workshop programme to support parents in developing confidence, resourcefulness, resilience and vitality from the inside out.  It’s different to many parenting programmes as it’s not about how you parent.  It’s about learning to understand who you are as a parent and your emotional needs so that you have the resourcefulness to be fully present to the joys and challenges of parenting.

www.thesunshinefactory.co.uk

A Celebration of Early Womanhood

Maria Law shares her thoughts on helping your daughter choose her first bra

Getting your first bra is a memorable experience. Sharing this moment with your daughter will let her know how important it is to wear a bra that fits properly and is therefore comfortable.

Most mums have fond or funny stories about their first bra experience.  On the Miss Dolly Sweetling Roadshow last year we shared many of these stories with mums and their daughters and all found it an amusing and very gentle way to approach what can sometimes be an embarrassing topic.

Young girls breast buds usually start to form about two years before their period begins. This gives mums plenty of time for all the open chats necessary during this exciting, yet possibly worrying stage.  As mothers of 6 daughters between us, Sophie and I know how normal all of these stages are, but for first time mums, a certain amount of apprehension is only natural.  We believe it’s very important to celebrate this special time as it builds confidence.  Confident young girls with a healthy self-image are much less likely to fall into worrying teenage traits usually associated with low-self image.

After a few weeks in a jersey cotton crop top, your daughter will be ready for her first soft bra.  Correct measuring is important and ensures that a good snug fit is achieved; a soft bra should feel comfortable after a couple of hours wear.  Avoid buying any bra that is under-wired or enhanced with pads/moulded cups at this early developmental stage; they can cause irreversible over-stretching of the ligaments.  If you stretch the ligaments (which hold the growing breast tissue) they will become saggy.

Re-measure regularly as her breasts grow (every 3-4 months).   Miss Dolly Sweetlings measuring page will calculate her size. Alternatively visit a lingerie shop or underwear department in a large retail store, which should offer a free fitting service without obligation to buy.

Your daughter’s first bra will have a band and a cup size; this is part of the new government guidelines highlighted recently during the debate about the ‘non-sexualisation’ of young girls.

The following fitting tips will ensure a correct fit:

The back band should be parallel to the floor with enough give in the elastic band to slip two fingers under comfortably. The shoulder straps shouldn’t leave any marks, they are not part of the support system; they keep the bra in place not the breasts.  Breasts should not be ‘pushed’ into any position they should sit quite naturally within the cup.

A good bra design is very important.  We spent over 2 years designing and then perfecting our Sweetling range – luckily we have 6 daughters, who, along with their friends, didn’t mind being our testers.

We developed the bras using the bias of the material to ‘give’ and ‘support’ in all the right places, this can involve up to 30 separate pieces being used for each bra. These are very complicated for the seamstresses to put together and take a long time to make but it does mean that we have produced a naturally supporting bra that is beautiful and comfortable to wear.

Maria Law runs Sweetling with Sophie Law. Family and sustainability are important to their business – the office, workshop and suppliers are all within biking distance of home and the children help name new ranges. Sweetling are keen to support the manufacturing industry in the UK and are involved in the “Let Girls be Girls” campaign. You can find out more at www.sweetling.co.uk

Sweetling recently won ‘Ethical Brand of the Year’ at the UK Lingerie Awards 2011.

http://www.uklingerieawards.com/05/ethical-brand-of-the-year/

 

Golden Path – Part 1

The Golden Path

A tool for navigating relationships

Standing on wobbly legs, leaning against a low table, the toddler looks gingerly over her shoulder. She smiles at her parents, who sit watching her, then shifts her balance and begins to take her first step. Her parents are out of their chairs, reaching forward, hands extended, smiling and encouraging – “How wonderful… you’re walking!” – and then the triumphant infant sinks into their arms, beaming. “Well done, little one!”

We believe that moments such as the one described above lay down crucial patterns for our future. Patterns such as the way in which we will think, our attitudes, our emotional health, the ways in which we will choose to act (and react), and even our physical posture. These moments are so important because they programme our neural pathways, linking initiative, movement, pleasure, love, trust and relationship. We call this pattern The Golden PathSM 1.

Through decades of work with adult learners, as well as through being parents, we have discovered that The Golden Path can be learned and then used in many situations, and that it achieves magical results with children, their parents and other adults. Part of the magic of this approach is that through deeply connecting with our children we also grow and heal ourselves.

The Golden Path is composed of five steps, and we have found it to be useful for all sorts of interaction.

Step 1: Welcome

Welcome whatever our child brings, regardless of the time or timing – “Come and look at this…”, “Help me…”

In the moment when we respond to our child, we can use the opportunity to reflect on times in our own life when we do and do not feel welcome (or welcoming).

As we do this, we can remind ourselves that the child’s observable behaviour is an expression of what troubles or excites her at that particular moment. The challenge is to identify with her and…

Step 2: Recognise

Recognise what our child is seeking to achieve, no matter how illogical it may seem to our ‘know better’ brain. This gives us as adults the opportunity to reflect on times when we are or are not given recognition (or miss the chance to acknowledge someone else we care about), and where this may lie in our history. While doing this we can be watchful for how we can…

Step 3: Support

Support our child in ways that fully represent his intention.

Whatever ‘good’ idea, whatever experience we may be able to give to our child, can we resist the temptation, and instead learn what he wants to do for himself? To support him on his own terms is deeply empathic and builds his self-confidence and trust.

As we do this, we can reflect on what support we need in our lives, and the support that others around us may also need. Connecting in this way to the quality of support allows us to…

Step 4: Strengthen

Through our love, and through the preceding steps, we strengthen our children’s ability to build their confidence to develop a strong sense of self, that is appropriate and is authentically rooted in what they wish to do – and how they wish to be, and give ‘right’ expression to this through their behaviour.

Through strengthening our child, we as adults integrate our own inner child and grow in those places where The Golden Path within us needs strengthening. In this way we come to

Step 5: Separating

We choose the mood or spirit in which we wish to part from our child, if only for a few minutes while we both shift focus. It is this mood that will be active in our child (and in us) at the next opportunity we have to welcome his attention.

Through this process we are truly developing the mindset, emotional maturity and socially response-able (responsible) behaviour that our children will need to take over the job of their own growth and development as part of their maturing in their adult life.

Instinctively parents may apply The Golden Path at key moments in their child’s development, such as learning to walk or to ride a bike. However, at other times life may be too busy and the habit of saying “Not now” or “I’ll be with you later” may just lead us to miss the moment to grow our child’s ability and heal ourselves.

The effect of The Golden Path is at its most potent from birth up to nine years (give or take a couple of years), during our prime time of emotional and intentional growth.

We have found that The Golden Path can be used frequently for significant ongoing situations (for example, supporting a child in learning to play an instrument) or for less significant issues (such as being interrupted when we are reading), and it even works with people up to their late eighties. Applying these principles can transform our irritation as parents at being distracted from our preoccupations into the satisfaction of true and mutual development.

And, being human, we will often miss these moments. So what do we do then? Well, we apply The Golden Path to ourselves! If we judge ourselves or feel concern for the effect our actions have had on our child, then we can welcome these feelings. We can recognise how a particular feelings works within us, and what it may lead us to say or do. We can support ourselves through this reflection and observe our pattern. Having done so, we will realise that even the missed moment has given us the opportunity to integrate more of our own parenting process, which in turn will strengthen us for the next opportunity that arises.

 

What does The Golden Path look like?

An afternoon. I have a pile of plans for my time.

My youngest comes up to me. “I’d like to make an apple pie.”

I feel mild irritation at the interruption and then realise I want to support her creative initiative. Here’s an opportunity.

“What do you need?”

She lists the ingredients and we gather them together.

“Could you prepare the apples, Mum, while I make the pastry?”

Hmm, I thought I’d done my bit.

However, her request is clear and direct and I can support her. I recall how my mother helped me in the kitchen, as I helped her, peeling or washing up.

“Sure.”

My daughter starts humming. I notice, with a smile. Ha… we are on The Golden Path! The kitchen is a warm, companionable, space.

I hand the peeled apples over.

“Thanks, Mum.”

I return to my jobs with renewed spirit and focus.

Later, we all enjoy a delicious pie and acknowledge our daughter’s skill as a pastry cook.

 

Note: Not all situations can be responded to immediately, but we can always find a way to welcome and recognise the request coming from our child.

 

Footnote:

1. The Golden PathSM is a tool for navigating relationships designed to support people at all stages of their lives including the crucial phase of 0-9 years of age. The Golden PathSM is the intellectual property of Consulting People Ltd. Anyone wishing  to use the The Golden PathSM in a commercial context needs written permission from CPL before such use.

 

Next article in Issue 24: Suporting older children to work with the Golden Path in their developing relationships

Gill Avery and Mike Vernon are co-founders of Consulting People Ltd. and Gill is also co-founder of Consulting Women. Through years of involvement in adult learning and development, and parenting their own family, they understand that the foundation for an adult is laid down in childhood. They have therefore developed navigation and engagement tools that they use with their clients and all their ‘children’.

www.consultingpeople.co.uk

www.consultingwomen.co.uk

 

Written by Gill Avery and Mike Vernon

Photo by Gill Avery