7 Things a Depressed Parent Can Say to a Child

I’m usually pretty good at hiding my tears from my kids, but lately I’ve been busted a few times because they come so frequently and don’t go away. How do I respond when my grade-schoolers ask me why I’ve been crying? How do I explain this insidious illness to them? Two years ago I wrote a children’s book devoted to these questions. It’s called, What Does Depressed Mean? A Guidebook for Children with a Depressed Loved One. Excerpted from the book, here are seven things that you can say to your child when you’re depressed. Your loved one is sick. You have probably heard someone say that your loved one is “depressed,” and you wonder what that means. You understand when a friend breaks his leg, or sprains a wrist, or has the flu. But what does it mean when someone’s depressed? Depression is an illness like any other illness. The messengers inside the brain that deliver notes from one side to the other get stuck … kind of like when you are supposed to bring in a permission slip from a parent to your teacher. If the note never got there, your teacher wouldn’t know what to do, right? Depression is the same sort of thing. Messages get stuck, and so the person becomes confused or sad. Depression is invisible. Depression is very weird to children because it’s invisible! It’s like the hidden pictures in those 3-D posters. Unless you wear 3-D glasses, you can’t see them. In the same way, your loved one looks perfectly normal, right? It’s hard to bel...
Source: World of Psychology - Category: Psychiatrists and Psychologists Authors: Tags: Antidepressant Children and Teens Depression Disorders Family General Medications Mental Health and Wellness Parenting Treatment Depression (mood) parent depression Parenthood Sadness Source Type: blogs