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Buffering Stress through Responsive Relationships

Learn how nurturing and responsive relationships can help buffer toxic stress and promote healthy brain development in children. Discover strategies for stress-busting caregivers and promoting self-regulation.

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Buffering Stress through Responsive Relationships

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  1. Buffering Stress through Responsive Relationships Lindsey Moss, MSW, LCSW Valerie Glascock, LPA

  2. How Brains are Built www.albertafamilywellness.org

  3. What is Needed to Buffer Toxic Stress? • Presence of warm, nurturing and responsive adult caregivers – in homes, in child care, and in school

  4. Relationships are the “Active Ingredients" of Early Experience • Nurturing and responsive relationships activate the basic connections necessary for building the foundation of healthy brain development • When these relationships are not present, persistent stress results in elevated cortisol levels that impair cell growth and interfere with formation of healthy neural circuits www.developingchild.harvard.edu

  5. “Still Face” Experiment Dr. Edward Tronick

  6. Discussion • What happens when the communication link is cut by the mother not responding? • What kinds of chronic stress do our children face?

  7. So How Can We Help?

  8. Stress-Busting Caregivers Provide: • Protection • Structure • Comfort • Coaching

  9. Safety First • Feeling physically and emotionally safe calms the stress response system • Young children depend on supportive relationships for feelings of safety • Establish and provide “safety signals” (blanket, pacifier)

  10. Protect from Danger Cues • Threat alerts the primitive brain; shuts down higher level thought processes • Each of us has our own unique set of “danger cues” (find out about previous negative experiences) • Young children mirror the emotions of their caregivers

  11. Sleep Nutrition Activity Structuring the Biological Foundation

  12. Structure through Routines • Routines calm and strengthen us by helping us predict what is going to happen • Maintain old routines • Establish new routines and rituals • Daily schedules – what comes next? • Rituals, especially when “separating” (ending visits, child care, bedtime)

  13. Structure through Limits • Limits should emphasize “keeping everyone safe” • Communicate and enforce limits by being: calm, consistent, respectful, firm, and kind • No yelling, threats or sarcasm - threat alerts the primitive brain; shuts down higher level thought processes • Comfort can be an effective part of discipline

  14. Limbic Level Communication • Touch • Tone of voice • Facial expression • Music • Smell • Rocking, other rhythmic motion

  15. Special Guidelines for Children Affected by Toxic Stress • Provide comfort even when child does not seek it – act “as if” the child needs you • Offer comfort and support early – don’t wait until the child has a “meltdown” • Be careful with expressions of annoyance and anger – they can “trigger” dysregulation

  16. Development of Self-Regulation • Managing impulses and emotions is related to connections in the frontal cortex • How well these skills develop depend to a large extent on having a caring adult emotionally available to model, guide, and support self-regulation

  17. Road to Self-Regulation • Self-regulation involves promoting effective connections between the structures of the limbic system and the cortex • Become aware of emotions, then decide how to act, or not act, on them • These skills begin to develop in preschool years - continue developing actively through adolescence

  18. Is Behavior Really the Problem? Emotion > Behavior

  19. Anger = Fear/Defense • Stressed-out children often ACT angry and aggressive when their threat systems are activated • When we respond with anger or punishment, we simply intensify this response • When we respond with empathy and protective limits, we calm their threat system

  20. Coaching Impulse Control and Coping • Join with the child – loan your cortex • Identify and empathize with feelings first • Pair language with action to promote cooperation and problem solving • Model optimism and mutual support • Promote empathy with others and repair of relationships • Maximize positive emotion

  21. FLIP It Approach Feelings (label, empathize) Limits (state limit with kindness) Inquiry (what would help you feel better/cope?) Prompts (problem solve together; suggest creative ways child might manage feelings) Sperry, R. W. (2011) FLIP It: Transforming Challenging Behavior

  22. Coaching through Stories • Self-regulation through narrative • Stories provide order, meaning, and hope • Beginning, middle, and end • Builds connections between limbic and cortical brain “I like to be told” - Mister Rogers

  23. Kinds of Narrative • Picture sequences of routines • Acting out stories with dolls • Picture books related to similar situations • Verbal planning of play and other activities • Creating specific social stories to help with problem behaviors • Writing about difficult experiences Pennebaker , J.W. (2004) Writing to Heal; Wilson, T.D. (2011) Redirect

  24. Role of Experience • Repeated use strengthens brain connections • If connections are not used, they are more likely to be “pruned” away • The brain “grows itself” for the environment it experiences • Emotion and relationships appear to play particularly important roles in shaping the brain’s development

  25. Implications for Parents, Teachers, & Caregivers • Your empathy, compassion, emotional and behavioral regulation are models for your children • Your emotional well-being affects your ability to guide and support young children • Quality of relationship with each child is a tool for supporting the development of self-regulation

  26. Be the Grown-Up • Bigger • Stronger • Wiser • Calm • KIND!

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