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Capturing the warmth and fun of forming close relationships with
children, this book offers simple advice to parents of children who
find it difficult to attach and bond - whether following adoption,
divorce or other difficult experiences. Attachment therapist
Deborah D. Gray describes how to use the latest thinking on
attachment in your daily parenting. She reveals sensory techniques
which have proven to help children bond - straightforward
activities like keeping close eye contact or stroking a child's
feet or cheeks - and explains why routines like mealtimes and play
time are so important in helping children to attach. The book
offers positive ideas for responding to immediate crises like
difficult behaviour and meltdowns, but importantly also offers
longer-term strategies to help children to develop the skills they
need to cope as they grow up - the ability to plan, concentrate and
be in control of their emotions. Offering fascinating insights into
how children who struggle to attach can be helped, this book is
full of easy-to-use ideas which will help you to enjoy the many
pleasures of bonding and attaching with your child.
Attaching in Adoption is a comprehensive guide for prospective and
actual adoptive parents on how to understand and care for their
adopted child and promote healthy attachment. This classic text
provides practical parenting strategies designed to enhance
children's happiness and emotional health. It explains what
attachment is, how grief and trauma can affect children's emotional
development, and how to improve attachment, respect, cooperation
and trust. Parenting techniques are matched to children's emotional
needs and stages, and checklists are included to help parents
assess how their child is doing at each developmental stage. The
book covers a wide range of issues including international
adoption, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, and learning
disabilities, and combines sound theory and direct advice with case
examples throughout. This book is a must read for anyone interested
in adoption and for all adoptive families. It will also be a
valuable resource for adoption professionals.
Packed full of great ideas for fun games and activities, this book
encourages positive attachments between a parent or carer and their
child. When it comes to choosing the best games to play with
children who have difficulties attaching, it is often hard to know
how to play with a purpose. This book contains fun, age-appropriate
games along with an explanation of why they matter. All the games
included are designed for specific age ranges, from infants to
older children, and help to address particular needs in children
that are known to affect attachment, including fetal alcohol
spectrum disorder. It provides an easy-to-understand description of
attachment and reveals the crucial role that play has in forming
attachments. Written for parents and carers, as well as for use by
professionals, it is full of strategies to help build healthy
attachments in children who have experienced early trauma.
Adopted children who have suffered trauma and neglect have
structural brain change, as well as specific developmental and
emotional needs. They need particular care to build attachment and
overcome trauma. This book provides professionals with the
knowledge and advice they need to help adoptive families build
positive relationships and help children heal. It explains how
neglect, trauma and prenatal exposure to drugs or alcohol affect
brain and emotional development, and explains how to recognise
these effects and attachment issues in children. It also provides
ways to help children settle into new families and home and school
approaches that encourage children to flourish. The book also
includes practical resources such as checklists, questionnaires,
assessments and tools for professionals including social workers,
child welfare workers and mental health workers. This book will be
an invaluable resource for professionals working with adoptive
families and will support them in nurturing positive family
relationships and resilient, happy children. It is ideal as a child
welfare text or reference book and will also be of interest to
parents.
Life story work is an approach designed to enable traumatized
children to explore, question and understand the past events of
their lives. It aims to secure their future by strengthening
attachment with their carers and providing the opportunity to
develop a healthy sense of self and a feeling of wellbeing. This
new edited volume documents innovative ways in which life story
work has been developed. It draws on the work of nine life story
centres based around the world and provides understanding and
guidance for those working with children who have experienced
trauma. The book illustrates current theory and practice and looks
at how the approach is being used in a variety of settings
including schools, intensive services, youth justice, and
post-adoption support, highlighting its versatility. The importance
of trauma-informed practice when working with vulnerable children
is emphasised throughout, to help practitioners provide the best
for the children in their care.
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