Melanie’s Things to Consider When It Comes to School:

Change is tough no matter what–give your child time and a safe space to express his/her fears, concerns and excitement.

1. Go over their schedule and if possible have them visit, meet the teacher prior. Go back to your earliest memories of school–what did you feel when you revisited that time? What happened? Who was with you?

2. For children with special needs, alteration in scheduling can be difficult. Start transitioning morning rituals before you start school. Allow them to take an active part in designing their morning schedule.

3. Kids and teens need at least 8-hours of sleep (this may be reduced in pre-adolescence and adolescence as their brains and biochemistry change).

4. Parents need to monitor.

5. Ensure that you have a solid ritual when they get home. This can be the most difficult time of the day when kids have literally kept their “lids” all day. Allow them some structured down time with set expectations when home work will be started (we all need this after a hard day of work) before launching into homework.

6. It is recommended that they have healthy choices for snacks and plenty of water for hydration before they start home work if they do this before dinner. Remember most schools are feeding kids really early in the day–so many are tired AND hungry.

7. Recognize that triggers from the past school year ago be “triggered” again–whether that is bullying, teasing, academic issues with a certain teacher/peer group.

8. Discuss some safety plans/coping skills they can utilize during their day, if needed. Be prepared to remain proactive through awareness.

9. Remain aware of how many activities your child is involved in. Who are these activities for? Are they benefitting them at this time? If your child seems overwhelmed, tired, and stressed out–you may need to consider what extracurricular activities to scale back for the time being.

10. Recognize the signs of depression, anxiety and stress in children and teens. Ask a professional if you are unsure. Many times these can be masked as hyperactivity, hyper-vigilance, aggression and other behavioral issues if these behaviors are prolonged and begin to impact your child’s overall demeanor and personality.

11. Do not be afraid to be an advocate for your child. You know your child the best.

12. Ask the Lord for discernment, wisdom, and patience regarding when to step in or no.


Melanie Chung-Sherman, MSSW, LCSW, LCPAA

Resources That Help

I want to share a thought with you that really hit me after a recent phone call I answered at ChristianWorks.  If you received our electronic newsletter this month, you read about the variety of phone calls we receive on a daily basis….

lt was from a young man hundreds of miles away in the State of Georgia who was employed as a hospital social worker.   He was calling to ask lots of questions about how to conduct a bereavement camp.  As he talked, he described a tragic event that had occurred in their small town resulting in the death of a young child, shocking everyone.  A few months later, a local citizen had come forward with funds to be able to offer a camp for grieving children and their families in this community.  This young man had been charged with the task of organizing and implementing such a camp and he knew ChristianWorks could help him!  Why?  Because he told me he had been reading our website, specifically the GriefWorks  and CounselingWorks microsites, for several years, and that he had been using that information to learn about grief and other life challenges to better serve patients and their family members….it was very useful to him, and educational for those he was trying to help and support.

The thought hit home with me that while we are a local ministry in the DFW metroplex, and many of our services offered involve coming to our physical location, we must remember there are many resources available on our website (www.christian-works.org) that can be useful to others who live thousands of miles away….the kind of resources that can calm your fears in the middle of the night, for example, if you are worried about a grieving child.   Check those resources out and remember them when you or someone you know needs help.

Our own bereavement camp, Camp Erin – Dallas / Fort Worth, in partnership with The Moyer Foundation, is next weekend…..please be mindful of the 81 children and teens and 70 volunteers attending….may hope and healing fill the lives of everyone present.

As always, thanks for reading along!

When Tragedy Strikes, Everything Changes

When death strikes, our world changes.  Suddenly we realize that the assumptions and beliefs we live by every day are not necessarily the way life really is.  Bad things can and do happen, not just to other people, but they can also happen to us and to the people we hold most dear.

When loved ones are taken by death or when tragedy hits the headlines we come to recognize that this world can be a very unsafe place to be, and that the plans and dreams we have for today or tomorrow can be shattered at any second by a random act of nature, a violent act of people we don’t even know or just by being in the wrong place at the wrong time.  We are forced to see how brutal our world can be and how fragile our lives are.

Whenever death and loss hit us, we go into shock, we look for answers to why tragic events and losses could have happened and we reflect on our lives and our beliefs.  Mourners, their caregivers and witnesses in the community are forced to learn quickly that:

  • All of us are vulnerable and Death is inevitable.  It doesn’t matter how successful or unsuccessful you are, how religious you are, how much good you do for others, how many degrees you have, or how well you have planned for the future, death and grief come to us all.  One hundred percent of us are going to die and one hundred percent of us will say goodbye to people we care for.  Death is the great equalizer of all humankind. In tragedy we face our mortality.
  • The most important things in life are not things.  People and relationships are most important.  After a tragic loss, survivors, their caregivers and witnesses to the tragic event feel compelled to get closer to family and the important people in their lives.  When we experience loss due to death–especially sudden, unexpected loss–we live in fear of what might happen next.  Writer C.S. Lewis put it this way in his book A Grief Observed, “No one ever told me that grief felt so like fear.”  In grief we live in fear of what tragic event will happen next and what other valuable people might be taken from us.
  • Time is precious, and it shouldn’t be wasted.  When loved ones die, we feel the regret for things said or not said, done or not done.  We wonder why we didn’t do things differently and why we didn’t cherish the relationships that we were given in our lives.  Our priorities change after loss. The “to do” lists and activities we once considered important seem trivial and even foolish in the aftermath of a loved one’s death and the onset of grief.  We search for meaning, purpose and joy in the “now” we live in when we realize that tomorrow or the next minute with our loved ones may not be ours.

Will tragedy, death and grief continue?  Unfortunately, yes. Important, loved ones will continue to die, tragedies will happen, and mourners will be left behind to grieve, hurt and pick up the pieces of their lives.  But loved ones can be remembered and honored in our grief.  The overflowing love we still have in our hearts for people no longer physically present can be expressed in healthy grief and in lives well-lived in memory of those loved ones lost.  We will not just be those surviving our loved ones who die. We will be living memorials to their valuable lives which cry out to be remembered.

We mourners left behind can learn the lessons of loss, remember them daily and change how we live now.  The physical relationships we still have can be treasured and appreciated now instead of after our loved ones and friends die.  We can let them know how much we care for them now in words and actions. In addition, we can make each moment count now rather than living in the past which cannot be changed or worrying about the future which we may not have.  Understanding now that this life is fragile, fleeting and far more important than we ever knew can enrich our lives and our relationships now.  And when the time comes and we run out of nows, we can say goodbye to others who die and leave this life when we die with fewer regrets.

Remember, all we have for sure is now.

Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.” James 4:13-15

Written by Larry M. Barber, LPC-S, CT, director of GriefWorks, CounselingWorks and KidWorks.

Larry is also the author of the grief survival guide “Love Never Dies: Embracing Grief with Hope and Promise” Available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and your local bookstore. Available now for Nook and Kindle.  Proceeds from the sale of the book benefit the free support services provided to mourning children and their families in GriefWorks.