Monday, June 25, 2007

Recent violence in Gaza leaves many young people shaken

Above with his school bag over his shoulder, a boy walks cautiously through a scene of recent intra-Palestinian fighting in Gaza.

NEW YORK, USA, 19 June 2007 – The recent intra-Palestinian violence in the Gaza Strip left many young people traumatized and unable to carry out their daily activities. Last week’s clashes between Hamas and Fatah killed more than 110 people and injured another 500.

Families cowered in their homes, unable to venture out, many without electricity and water. Young people were left with nothing to do but wait and hope, disappointed over the cancellation of summer plans and the uncertainty that is now a part of their lives.

“Last week, life wasn’t going that well,” recalled Julie, 17, one of several Palestinian youths who spoke to UNICEF Radio about their ordeal. “They were continuously shooting for five days,” she continued. “The situation was really bad. Nobody was able to get out of the house, not even able to get near a window.”

‘Fighting in the streets’

Bombs did extensive damage to the electricity network in Gaza, and many people lost power in their homes. The outage also interrupted sewage and water-supply services.

Fear was most deeply felt by civilians near the areas where fighting was most intense.

“The last week was awful. It was a nightmare,” said Chris, 13. “There was conflict near our house, and everywhere we heard the clashes. We couldn’t leave our house.

“We went in the bathroom and we stayed there for the whole day. When it was time to sleep, we slept on the ground, because we were afraid of bullets coming into our house,” he noted.

“It was a mess,” reported Mustafa, another teenager. “It was all masked men fighting in the streets. They just threw the bombs and many, many houses here got attacked for nothing. Many civilians died, just walking in the streets or while they were in their homes.”

Final exams disrupted for many

Mustafa and other students who were taking their Tawjihi exams (secondary-school matriculation finals) amidst the crisis were under considerable stress. Some did not do as well as they had hoped, while others missed the tests entirely. Still, some 24,000 students sat their exams each day.

“It was really hard for me to concentrate on my studies with all this shooting and fighting on the other side,” said Yaffa, 18.

Added Mustafa: “I had to miss one of my exams. We didn’t leave our home for a few days.”

Despite these challenges, both Mustafa and Yaffa hope their test scores will help them get into the universities they choose.

Relief aid from UNICEF

In the aftermath of last week’s violence, UNICEF is planning to ship much-needed vaccines to Gaza. Hospitals there have been hard hit; they still lack vascular surgery kits, blood units, X-ray films, sutures, lab supplies and orthopaedic casts. Many essential drugs are running out.

UNICEF is also planning to provide 50,000 litres of diesel fuel through its partner, the Coastal Municipalities Water Utility, while the provision of fuel through regular channels is restored.

And psychosocial counselling teams have resumed their work in Gaza through a partnership between UNICEF and local non-governmental organizations. The teams are currently screening children in the most affected areas to identify those who require the most attention.

Living with fear and uncertainty

In the meantime, young people like Julie, Chris, Mustafa and Yaffa must live with the trauma they have endured, and face an uncertain future.

“We are afraid that electricity and water will stop,” said Chris. “We are afraid that there is no money, and no food that will enter Gaza because all the borders with countries that support Gaza are closed. Last summer, the same thing happened.

“I am afraid to go out, and so are my friends in Gaza, because we are afraid that the conflicts will resume,” he explained.

“Every time I hope that they will get everything fixed,” lamented Julie, “they turn back to fighting, again and again, over and over. They never stop.”

18 June 2007: UNICEF correspondent Amy Bennett speaks with four young people in Gaza in the wake of violent clashes between Hamas and Fatah. AUDIO listen

Source: UNICEF

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Experts to discuss smacking issue

A campaign to prevent parents from smacking their children will be discussed at a conference in Edinburgh.

Children's groups insist it is unacceptable that Scots law allows "justifiable assault" on children.

Representatives from education and the justice system will outline on Wednesday why smacking is not an acceptable way to enforce discipline.

In 2002 the Scottish Executive abandoned plans to ban smacking children under the age of three.

At the conference, Scotland's Children's Commissioner Kathleen Marshall will urge a change in the law to provide more protection for children.

She said the defence of "justifiable assault" on a child is "unbelievable" and needs to be completely removed from Scots law.

Detective Chief Superintendent John Carnochan is also expected to say that parents play a crucial role in helping to change attitudes to violence in Scotland.

Source: BBC

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Severe Child Poverty In The UK

Save the Children, as part of the campaign to End Child Poverty, has found that, in the UK, nearly one and a half million children live in severe poverty, in families living on an average of £7000 a year.

An income of £7000 a year means that a family has only £19 per day to cover electricity and gas, phones, other bills, food, clothes, washing, transport, health needs as well as activities for children and all other essential items.

Currently the Government doesn't track how many children in the UK live in severe poverty so they can't ensure their policies help the poorest children. They must tackle severe poverty now and invest the extra money needed if they're to meet the target of halving child poverty in the UK by 2010.

What you can do

Scource: Save The Children

Sunday, June 10, 2007

What happened to childhood? How we are failing the young

A major study of British children obtained by the 'IoS' before its submission to the UN, makes disturbing reading. They are materially wealthier than ever, but poorer in health and well-being, and demonised by Asbos.

The health and well-being of an entire generation of children are at risk because the Government is failing to uphold their rights to privacy, safety and equality.

A dossier of evidence from 380 campaign and welfare groups, the most extensive ever into children's rights, obtained by The Independent on Sunday reveals that more than 40 child-protection safeguards are being breached in the UK.

The Children's Rights Alliance for England (CRAE), which represents the groups, is to hand over the evidence to the United Nations and accuse the Government of "wilful neglect" over its repeated failure to implement the international treaty protecting under-18s, the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

CRAE, whose members include Save the Children and Barnado's, warns that the widespread use of CCTV in schools, the "naming and shaming" of Asbo teenagers and the fact that parents can still smack children at home are just some examples of how the rights of children are being undermined.

They say that the life chances of the young and vulnerable, including refugees, teenagers in prison and children living in poverty, are being severely jeopardised by the lack of protection they are given by the state.

A growing divide between poor children and their affluent peers is highlighted in the report. An investigation by The Independent on Sunday into the issues raised by the report and what life is like for children in Britain in the 21st century has revealed that the gulf between children from affluent families and those on the breadline is widening, despite the fact that life has improved in areas such as health and education.

The report highlights a series of issues the Government needs to address urgently if it wants to meet its obligations to children. Some 3.4 million children remain in poverty, despite living in the fifth richest country in the world. About 400,000 live in overcrowded conditions; the same number are on the Home Office's DNA database, and the UK incarcerates more children than any other country in Europe, about 9,000. More than 3,000 are in young offender institutions and 500 are in prison on remand, breaching international child-protection conventions.

Professor Jonathan Bradshaw, an expert on childhood, said that overall the evidence was that British children were not doing as well as those in other countries and that more effort was needed to reduce child poverty and deprivation.

"In many ways, children in this country are very lucky, compared to those in Third World countries, but there is a fierce challenge to make childhood a better experience than it is. I think we are moving in the right direction, just not quickly enough," said Professor Bradshaw of York University.

In other areas, the picture that emerges is more complex. In healthcare, for example, there have been massive advances with children in general physically healthier than ever before. Infant mortality rates have fallen from 17 deaths per 1,000 live births in 1971 to five per 1,000 today. The blanket introduction of child vaccination programmes against measles, diphtheria and tuberculosis is partly behind this dramatic drop in mortality rates.

Yet despite benefiting from scientific advancements, children and teenagers are victims of their own sedentary lifestyles and Britain's fast-food culture which has sent childhood obesity rates rocketing. The incidence of obesity has tripled since the 1970s and this has also triggered a rise in diabetes among young children. Research from the Medical Research Council compared the diets of children today and those in the 1950s and found that youngsters growing up in post-war Britain ate far more healthily, despite the limited variety of food.

There is also growing concern about the mental well-being of young people. The average age for depression to strike is now 14, down from 30 in the 1980s. Britain also has the highest self-harm rate in Europe.

A major anxiety among parents is the safety of their children, heightened by the recent abduction of four-year-old Madeleine McCann in Portugal. Yet despite society's obsession with threats from paedophiles, there is no evidence that children face any greater risks than they did a few decades ago. This is backed up by official statistics which show that the annual toll of child murders is 79, a figure almost identical to 30 years ago.

Britain also has one of the lowest child death rates from accidents of any rich country in the world. The number of under 15s killed in 2004 was 166, a drop from 668 in 1976. The chances of a child being run over on Britain's roads have also declined massively, although this country scores badly compared with elsewhere in Europe.

Parental paranoia over the safety of their children is undermining the confidence and emotional development of their offspring, according to some experts. A report from the Children's Society published last week revealed that the majority of 10-year-olds have never been allowed to go to the shops or park on their own because of safety fears from parents of "stranger danger". They found that 43 per cent of adults believe that children should not be allowed out with their friends until they are 14 or over, despite the fact those interviewed had themselves been allowed to play unsupervised from the age of 10.

Professor Robert Winston, one of Britain's most eminent child development experts, will highlight the issue this week in a speech to the Children's Safety Education Foundation (CSEF), a charity which helps to promote safety among young people. He said: "It is vital for a child's development that they know how to keep themselves safe. This sort of responsibility and independence will actually make them far safer in the outside world."

There is no doubt that materially Britain's youth have never had it so good. They have more disposable income and consumer luxuries than any other generation. This trend has been fuelled by advancements in technology which have in turn spawned the iPod generation where digital music players and mobile phones are must-have accessories. Nearly two-thirds of eight- to 15-year-olds also have access to the internet at home, while 65 per cent have their own mobile phone. Increases in pocket money have also allowed them to indulge their consumer appetites.

In their home lives, there is evidence that children are spending more time with their parents than they did in the past, despite the fact that mothers and fathers are working longer hours. Yet an increase in divorce rates over the past few decades has meant that the traditional family unit and the role of children within it have changed dramatically. The number of young people living in one-parent families has tripled from 8 per cent in 1971 to 24 per cent today. And new estimates released by the Government show that many children are unlikely to have a father around. As many as one in 10 of the entire adult male population is now an absentee father.

On the surface, educational prospects for Britons under 18 look promising. More than half of schoolchildren - 58 per cent - obtained five A*-C grade GCSEs in 2006, an increase of more than 13 per cent since 1997. The educational attainment levels of British children at the age of 11 and 15 put this country in the top third of developed countries. But the gulf in academic achievement between rich and poor is greater than ever before. Children from the richest 20 per cent of families are about five times more likely to acquire a degree by the age of 23 than those from the poorest 20 per cent. In the early 1980s, the figure was about three times more likely. It also found that a disproportionate number of exclusions continue to be given to pupils with special educational needs and those from black and minority ethnic groups.

A major concern of children's rights campaigners is the demonisation of the nation's youth. Anti-social behaviour has become a major preoccupation in society and the Government has responded with banning orders and Asbos to protect communities from feral youths. But this has led to accusations that children feel they cannot be free to enjoy childhood without fear of being arrested for kicking a ball in the street.

Bob Reitemeier, chief executive of the Children's Society, said that many children were being punished for merely hanging out on street corners. "There's no question that some children behave very badly but there are an awful lot who, by hanging out on street corners, are not actually causing any trouble," he said.

Professor Al Aynsley-Green, the children's commissioner for England and Wales, said that many young people still face "appalling" obstacles to their health, well-being and happiness and that their needs should be respected. "Children and young people should not be regarded as the cause of society's failures and it is high time we took responsibility for raising them in communities where they are loved, feel safe and their concerns are listened to and acted on."

For those who do end up in the criminal justice system, the outlook is bleak. More than 3,000 children have been sent to young offender institutions despite being classed as vulnerable.

Ministers argue there have been great advancements under their Every Child Matters initiative, introduced in 2004, in making Britain a healthy, safe and financially secure country for children to grow up in. One of Gordon Brown's major pledges was to halve child poverty by 2010, and figures show that the Government has partly managed to fulfil this promise. The risk of a child living in severe hardship and deprivation is now 28 per cent, but this is still double the rate it was in 1979.

CRAE says that Britain still does not have a government that takes the welfare of children seriously enough and is calling on Mr Brown, who takes over as Prime Minister this month, to take urgent action.

"If the public knew more about the treatment of some of our most vulnerable children, they would be horrified," said Carolynne Willow from CRAE.

Martin Narey, chief executive of Barnado's which helped to compile the CRAE report, said that Britain should be "ashamed" that nearly four million children are still living in desperate circumstances in a country which has the fifth richest economy in the world. "This is a wonderful opportunity for Gordon Brown to be known as the Prime Minister who halved child poverty and made the UK a fairer place."

Beverley Hughes, the children's minister, said that many provisions in the European Convention on the Rights of the Child are already part of UK law.

"What matters is a child's well-being," she said. "Rights play an important part in delivering this but we also need to concentrate on supporting children - and their parents - and making sure every child has a good childhood and good prospects for the future."

The key to achieving this is resources, say campaigners. Camila Batmanghelidjh, who founded Kids Company, said that there has to be sufficient funding to "put words into action".

"For the uncared-for child, their basic needs are often not being met and they also have a problem in terms of how they bring themselves to the attention of the people to meet their needs."

John O'Neill, 16, Salford

"I live with my mum, dad, sister and baby brother on a council estate. A lot of my mates who've left school and college can't find work. That's my biggest worry. If people say white working-class boys are underachieving at school, they've got it wrong. I know that in my school, there are more males than females that are aiming for higher grades. There are a lot of issues where I live: there's a lot of crime, young people on street corners, stolen cars."

Alicia Murray, 15, London

"On the whole I have found teachers to be helpful. There are other teachers that I have found to be not so helpful. The good teachers are always there for you and understand you, the teachers who don't want to care are just like 'So? It's not my duty'. I don't think there's that much of a poverty gap between children. You do see poor kids and rich kids hanging out together because we understand that not everyone has the latest stuff."

Hannah Erickson, 16, Cardiff

"I have money given to me - but not enough. As soon as I've paid for my bills, food and nappies, I have about £10 left over for myself for the week. I want to go to college and study hair and beauty at college in September. I didn't like my teachers at school. When I found out I was pregnant I was scared because I didn't know what I was going to do and how I was going to support my baby. I think there is a bigger gap between rich and poor kids these days."

Thomas Bielby, 16, Middlesbrough

"If you think of what kids have nowadays - PSPs, mobile phones, iPods - compared to a few years ago. I think children have really grown up with the times to be able to buy all this gear and still pay for other things too. I do worry about money. The cost of living is very expensive these days. So are university fees. I've found that often school just talks about the financial problems we'll face without offering any solutions - this puts me off uni."

Source: The Independent

Daycare children 'more antisocial'


Away days: the study found the longer above 10 hours a week children spend in care, the more likely they are to be difficult once they start school.

EVIDENCE is mounting that young children who spend significant periods of time in daycare while their parents work are more prone to developing aggressive and antisocial behaviour.

A new study from the United States suggests that children who went to nursery during their pre-school years rather than staying at home were more likely to be disruptive once formal education began.

The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) has followed the progress and development of 1,300 children since 1991. It concluded that the longer above 10 hours a week a child spent in group care, the more likely teachers were to report difficult behaviour once they started school.

The findings are strikingly similar to the results of a recently published government-funded research project carried out by Oxford University and the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

It concluded that children under the age of three who spend more than 35 hours a week at nursery show higher levels of antisocial behaviour than those spending less time in daycare.

In Scotland, the Executive provides free nursery places for three and four-year-olds, which entitles parents to 12.5 hours care a week.

Almost 99% of four-year-olds take up the places, compared with 96% of three-year-olds. Many parents supplement this with longer-term private care.

The growing demand to balance childcare and work has meant the number of people employed in pre-school education in Scotland has grown to more than 30,000.

The new NICHD research showed that teachers of 11 and 12-year-olds in the US reported that those who spent more time in early childcare were more likely than other children to "be disobedient", to "get in many fights" and to "argue a lot".

This was not reflected in children who were looked after by family members, childminders or nannies.

Teachers involved in the research had a "problem checklist" which they used to rate children on behaviours such as bullying, bragging, arguing, fighting, lying, cheating, cruelty and destructiveness, including arson.

Dr Jim Griffin, NICHD's programme director for early learning and school readiness, believes the low-level negative behaviour may be fuelled by youngsters competing for adult attention in nurseries and childcare centres.

He said: "These findings add to the growing body of research showing that the quality and type of childcare a child experiences early in life can have a lasting impact on their development."

The authors will now continue to follow the children's development in secondary school to see if the effects shown in the current research persist.

The study, the most in-depth of its kind in the world, has tracked the same children at intervals since birth, evaluating their cognitive and social skills, behaviour and academic achievement in the context of their childcare experiences.

Separate research from Cambridge University and the Free University of Berlin found the level of the stress hormone cortisol doubled in some toddlers during their first nine days at nursery.

The levels were still relatively high several months later, even though the toddlers showed no outward signs of distress.

The study, led by Professor Michael Lamb of Cambridge and Lieselotte Ahnert of Berlin, monitored 36 girls and 34 boys aged between 11 and 20 months. The children had all been cared for mainly at home and were then placed in nurseries for 40 hours a week.

Their stress levels were found to be between 75% and 100% higher compared with when they had been at home.

The National Day Nurseries Association felt the research did not give the whole picture. "We hope that families are not needlessly worried by these reports, which only relate to behaviour difficulties in a small number of cases," said a spokeswoman.

"Children from workless households were rated as less cooperative and sociable than children in centres with high levels of working parents. This indicates there is a complex mix of factors that influence a child's behaviour and that careful attention is needed to ensure children are supported appropriately."

But a spokesman for the UK Department of Education said: "Any argument that there is evidence women are letting down their children by going out to work is faintly ludicrous."

A Scottish Executive spokesman said: "We are committed to extending access to high-quality, affordable and flexible childcare services which match children's needs and parents' working patterns."

Source: Scotland on Sunday

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Concerning Primal Self -Therapy


Painting By Alice Miller

I am frequently asked what I consider to be the decisive factor in psychotherapy today. Is it the recognition of the truth, liberation from the enforced vow of silence and from idealization of one's parents, or is it the presence of an Enlightened Witness? My view is that it is not a question of either-or but of both-and. Without the Enlightened Witness it is impossible to bear the truth of what happened to us in early infancy. But by the term Enlightened Witness I do not mean anyone who has studied psychology or has been through primal experiences with a guru and has remained in his thrall. For me, Enlightened Witnesses are therapists with the courage to face up to their own histories and to gain their autonomy in doing so, rather than seeking to offset their own repressed feelings of ineffectuality by exerting power over their patients.

The adult needs assistance in coping with the present situations as an adult, while at the same time maintaining contact with the suffering and knowing child he once was, the child he could not muster the courage to listen to for so long but now, with help, can finally pay heed to. The body knows everything that has happened to it but it has no language to express that knowledge. It is like the child we once were, the child that sees all but without the aid of the adults remains helpless and alone. Accordingly, whenever the emotions from the past rise to the surface they are invariably accompanied by the fears of the helpless child, dependent on the understanding or at least the reassurances of the caregivers.

Unlike the body, our cognitive system knows little of the events far back in the past; conscious memories are fragmentary, brittle, unreliable. But the cognitive system has a huge fund of knowledge at its disposal, a fully developed mind, and the life experience a child cannot yet have. As adults are no longer powerless, they can offer the child within them (the body) protection and an attentive ear so that it can express itself in its own way and tell its own story. It is in the light of these stories that the looming, incomprehensible fears and emotions of the adult take on meaning. Finally they stand in a recognizable context and are no longer so obscurely menacing.

In a society with a receptive attitude to the distress of children no one will be alone with his/her history. The same is true of therapists. Because then everyone will know that it is not the children who are responsible for their sufferings but the adults.

I recently wrote a letter in French to the forum that I am quoting in English below:

Dear Franck, I understand well your fascination for the manual of Stettbacher. When I read this manuscript in 1989 I thought that it contained the solution for a lot of readers who, after having read my books, were looking, like you, for the sources of their sufferings and fears in the history of their childhood. As I had never had the luck to be understood and helped in my childhood nor in my therapies (it was always me who had to help others) I found the idea of a primal self - therapy at first quite normal and acceptable. It is after some years that I grasped the big importance and even necessity of an enlightened and empathic therapist in the process of recovery. Especially thanks to letters of people that failed to help themselves and who blamed themselves for their plight ( trying to do more and more therapy and turning around alone with their fears and pains) that I understood that the primal self - therapy can indeed trigger easily the old pent-up emotions but can reactivate the situation of the child that was always alone with his/her pains and fears. This repetition of the old trauma is the opposite of a therapy.
Today, I share the opinion of Arthur Janov who always affirmed, that primal therapy without the assistance of a well informed and compassionate therapist can be very dangerous. (cf. his homepage). In addition, I think that it contains (1) a contradiction in itself by reactivating a situation of which one want to get rid of and (2) a perpetuation of the violence directed toward oneself.
I don't have any contact with Mister Stettbacher since 1994 when I stopped to recommend his method but I suppose that the information on its negative effects reached him too and that it already motivated him to stop recommending it. Since the release of his book there is a lot of new information on this topic available that are easily accessible thanks to the internet. Maybe, a next book by Stettbacher will bring the necessary corrections to his present work, published 12 years ago.

By Alice Miller

© 2006 Alice Miller

Drama of The Gifted Child

By Alice Miller

The Positive Mind- Armand DiMele - Radio show

Part 1 - The Birth of the False Self Part one of the Gifted Child series.

Part 2 - Narcissism, Depression and Grandiosity Part two of the Gifted Child series.

Part 3 - The Wound That Won't Heal Part three of the Gifted Child series.

Part 4 - Reclaiming the Self Part four of the Gifted Child series.

Source: The Positive Mind

Comment: Good series of radio shows, I don't agree when he asked his phone in guess's "Do you forgive your Mum or Parents". Alice Miller would not agree with this see below also see the next post called Concering Primal Self - Therapy, she now does not agree with Primal Self-Therapy:

Concerning Foregiveness: The Liberating Experience of Painful Truth

The mistreated and neglected child is completely alone in the darkness of confusion and fear. Surrounded by arrogance and hatred, robbed of its rights and its speech, deceived in its love and its trust, disregarded, humiliated, mocked in its pain, such a child is blind, lost, and pitilessly exposed to the power of ignorant adults. It is without orientation and completely defenseless.

Its whole being would like to shout out its anger, give voice to its feeling of outrage, call for help. But that is exactly what it may not do. All its normal reactions, the reactions with which nature has endowed it to help it survive, remain blocked. If no witness comes to its aid, these natural reactions would enlarge and prolong the child's sufferings. Ultimately, the child could die of them.

Thus, the healthy impulse to protest against inhumanity has to be suppressed. The child attempts to extinguish and erase from memory everything that has happened to it, in order to banish from consciousness the burning outrage, fury , fear, and the unbearable pain - as it hopes, forever. What remains is a feeling of its own guilt, rather than outrage that it is forced to kiss the hand that beats it and beg for forgiveness - something that unfortunately happens more than one imagines.The abused child goes on living within those who have survived such torture, a torture that ended with total repression. They live with the darkness of fear, oppression, and threats. When all its attempts to move the adult to heed its story have failed, it resorts to the language of symptoms to make itself heard. Enter addiction, psychosis, criminality.If, as adults, we nevertheless begin to have an inkling of why we are suffering and ask a specialist whether these sufferings could have a connection with our childhood, we will usually be told that this is very unlikely to be the case. And if it were, that we should learn forgiveness. It is the resentment at the past, we are told, that is making us ill.In those by-now familiar groups in which addicts and their relations go into therapy together, the following belief is invariably expressed. Only when you have forgiven your parents for everything they did to you can you get well. Even if both parents were alcoholics, even if they mistreated, confused, exploited, beat, and totally overloaded you, you must forgive them everything. Otherwise, your illness will not be cured. There are many programs going by the name of "therapy", whose basis consists of first learning to express one's feelings in order to see what happened in childhood. Then, however, comes "the work of forgiveness", which is apparently necessary if one is to heal. Many young people who have AIDS or are drug-addicted die in the wake of their effort to forgive so much. What they do not realize is that they are trying to keep the repression of their childhood intact.

Some therapists fear this truth. They work under the influence of various interpretations culled from both Western and Oriental religions, which preach forgiveness to the once-mistreated child. Thereby, they create a new vicious circle for people who, from their earliest years, have been caught in the vicious circle of pedagogy . This, they refer to as "therapy". In so doing, they lead them into a trap from which there is no escape, the same trap that once rendered their natural protests impossible, thus causing the illness in the first place. Because such therapists, caught as they are in the pedagogic system, cannot help patients to resolve the consequences of the traumatization they have suffered, they offer them traditional morality instead.

In recent years I have been sent many books from the United States of America describing different kinds of therapeutic intervention by authors with whom I am not familiar. Many of these authors presume that forgiveness is an indispensable condition for successful therapy. This notion appears to be so widespread in therapeutic circles that it is not always called into question - something urgently needed. For forgiveness does not resolve latent hatred and self-hatred but can cover them up in a very dangerous way.

I know of the case of one woman, whose mother was sexually abused as a child by both her father and brother. Reared in a convent, this woman learned "the blessing of forgiveness" by heart. She continued to worship her father and brother without the slightest trace of bitterness. While her daughter was still an infant, she frequently left the child "in the care of" her thirteen-year-old nephew, while she went blithely off to the movies with her husband. While she was gone, the pubescent babysitter indulged his sexual desires on the body of her baby daughter. When the daughter later sought help in psychoanalytic counseling, the analyst told her she should on no account blame her mother. Her intentions had not been bad, she was told. She had had no idea that her babysitter was routinely abusing her child. The mother, it seems, was literally clueless. When the child began to develop dietary disturbances, she anxiously consulted a number of doctors. They assured her that the disturbances in her eating habits came from "teething." Thus, the gears of this forgiveness machine were functioning almost perfectly - and, at the expense of the truth and the lives of all concerned. Fortunately, they don't always function as well.In her highly creative, remarkable book THE OBSIDIAN MIRROR: AN ADULT HEALING FROM INCEST (Seal Press, 1988), Louise Wisechild describes how she succeeded in deciphering her body's messages and communications, and thereby her feelings, so that she was gradually able to free her childhood from repression. This took place in a successful therapy involving bodywork and written accounts of her experiences. Gradually, she discovered in detail what she had totally banished from consciousness: that she had been sexually molested by her grandfather at the age of four; that she was subsequently abused by an uncle and finally also by her stepfather. A woman therapist was willing and brave enough to work with her on this horrific journey of self-discovery, in spite of the manifest torture to which the patient had been subjected. Nevertheless, even in this most successful therapy Louise sometimes felt that she should forgive her mother. On the other hand, she strongly felt that this might be wrong. Fortunately, the therapist didn't insist too much on this point. She gave Louise the freedom to follow her own feelings and to discover that it was not forgiveness that made her strong in the end. Helping the patient to resolve the guilt feelings that had been imposed upon her - the ultimate purpose, presumably, of therapy - doesn't mean to burden her with an additional demand, a demand that could only serve to cement those feelings of guilt. A quasi-religious act of forgiveness can never resolve patterns of self-destruction.

Why should this woman, after showing her concern for her mother for thirty years, forgive her crime, when that mother had never made the slightest effort to see what she had done to her daughter? On one occasion, as the child, rigid with fear and disgust, was forced to lie under the heavy , male body of her uncle, she caught sight of her mother in the mirror as she approached the door. The child hoped to be saved, but the mother turned and disappeared. When Louise was an adult, she heard her mother say that she could only cope with her fear of that uncle if her children were around her. When the daughter tried to discuss her rape at the hands of her stepfather, her mother wrote her that she never wished to see her again. Even in many such blatant cases, the pressure to forgive, which effectively prevents the chance of a successful therapy, is hardly seen as the absurd demand that it is. It is just this common pressure to forgive that mobilizes old fears in the patient that oblige him or her to believe such an authority. What can it possibly achieve, except a quiet conscience for the therapist?*

In many cases much can be destroyed with a single, fundamentally wrong, confusing sentence. That it is well anchored in tradition and has been implanted in us since our earliest childhood only makes matters worse. What is involved here is an outrageous misuse of power , by which therapists are wont to ward off their powerlessness and fear. Patients, for their part, are convinced that the therapist holds this view as a result of the incontrovertible evidence of experience and so believe this "authority". They cannot know-and it is almost impossible for them to discover-that what this claim in fact discloses is the therapist's own fear of the mistreatment suffered at the hands of his or her parents. How are patients meant to resolve their feelings of guilt under such circumstances? On the contrary , they will simply be confirmed.

Preaching forgiveness reveals the pedagogic nature of some therapies. In addition, it exposes the powerlessness of the preachers. In a sense, it is odd that they call themselves "therapists" at all. "Priests" would be more apt. What ultimately emerges is the continuation of the blindness inherited in childhood, the blindness that a real therapy could relieve. What is constantly repeated to patients -until they believe it, and the therapist is mollified - is: "Your hate is making you ill. You must forgive and forget. Then you will be well." But it was not hatred that drove patients to mute desperation in their childhood, by alienating them from their feelings and their needs. It was such morality with which they were constantly pressured.

It was my experience that it was precisely the opposite of forgiveness - namely, rebellion against mistreatment suffered, the recognition and condemnation of my parents' misleading opinions and actions, and the articulation of my own needs - that ultimately freed me from the past. In my childhood, these things had been ignored in the name of "a good upbringing," and I myself learned to ignore them for decades in order to be the "good" and "tolerant" child my parents wished me to be. But today I know: I always needed to expose and fight against opinions and attitudes that I considered destructive of life wherever I encountered them, and not to tolerate them. But I could only do this effectively once I had felt and experienced what was inflicted on me earlier. By preventing me from feeling the pain, the moral religious injunction to forgive did nothing but hinder this process.

The demand for good behavior has nothing to do with either an effective therapy or life. For many people in search of help, it closes the path to freedom. Therapists allow themselves to be led by their own fear - the mistreated child's fear of its parents' revenge - and by the hope that good behavior might one day be able to buy the love their parents denied them. The price that patients have to pay for this illusory hope is high indeed. Given false information, they cannot find the path to self-fulfillment.

By refusing to forgive, I give up my illusions. A mistreated child, of course, cannot live without them. But a grown-up therapist must be able to manage it. His or her patients should be able to ask: "Why should I forgive, when no one is asking me to? I mean, my parents refuse to understand and to know what they did to me. So why should I go on trying to understand and forgive my parents and whatever happened in their childhood, with things like psychoanalysis and transactional analysis? What's the use? Whom does it help? It doesn't help my parents to see the truth. But it does prevent me from experiencing my feelings, the feelings that would give me access to the truth. But under the bell-jar of forgiveness, feelings cannot and may not blossom freely." Such reflections are, unfortunately, not common in therapeutic circles, in which forgiveness is the ultimate law. The only compromise that is made consists of differentiating between false and correct forms of forgiveness. But therapy requires only the "correct" form. And this goal may never be questioned.

I have asked many therapists why it is that they believe their patients must forgive if they are to become well, but I have never received a halfway acceptable answer. Clearly, they had never questioned their assertion. It was, for them, as self-evident as the mistreatment with which they grew up. I cannot conceive of a society in which children are not mistreated, but respected and lovingly cared for, that would develop an ideology of forgiveness for incomprehensible cruelties. This ideology is indivisible with the command "Thou shalt not be aware" and with the repetition of that cruelty on the next generation. It is our children who pay the price for our lack of awareness. Our fear of our parents' revenge is the basis of our morality.

However, by means of gradual therapeutic disclosure that dispenses with bogus morality and pedagogy , this misleading ideology can be stopped. Survivors of mistreatment need to discover their own truth if they are to free themselves of its consequences. Moralizing leads them away from this truth.

An effective therapy cannot be achieved if the mechanisms of pedagogy continue to operate. It requires recognition of the damage caused by our upbringing, whose consequences it should resolve. It must make patients' feelings available to them-and accessible for the entirety of their lives. This can help them to orientate and be at one with themselves. Moralizing appeals can result in barring access to this self-knowledge.

A child can excuse its parents, if they in their turn are prepared to recognize and admit to their failures. But the demand for forgiveness that I often encounter can pose a danger for therapy, even though it is an expression of our culture. Mistreatment of children is the order of the day, and those errors are therefore trivialized by the majority of adults. Forgiving can have negative consequences, not only for the individual, but for society at large, because it can mean disguising erroneous opinions and attitudes, and involves drawing a curtain across reality so that we cannot see what is taking place behind it.

The possibility of change depends on whether there is a sufficient number of enlightened witnesses to create a safety net for the growing consciousness of those who have been mistreated as children, so that they do not fall into the darkness of forgetfulness, from which they will later emerge as criminals or the mentally ill. Cradled in the "net" provided by such enlightened witnesses, these children can grow to be conscious adults, adults who live with and not against their past and who will therefore be able to do everything they can to create a more humane future for us all.

It has already been scientifically proved that weeping caused by sadness, pain, and fear not only causes tears to fall. Stress hormones, which lead to a general relaxation of the body, are also released. Of course, this cannot be equated with therapy. Nevertheless, it is an important discovery that should find its way into the treatments used by therapeutic practitioners. So far, though, the opposite has been the case. Patients are given tranquilizers to calm them. What would happen if they began to gain access to the causes of their symptoms! The problem with medical pedagogy is that the majority of those involved, the institutions and specialists, in no way wish to know why it is people become ill. The result of this denial is that countless chronically ill people become permanent residents of our prisons and clinics, while billions are spent by the government on keeping mum about the truth. Those affected must on no account realize that they can be helped to understand the language of their childhood, thereby truly reducing their suffering or even relieving it altogether.

If we had the courage to confront the facts about the repression of childhood mistreatment and its consequences, this would be possible. One look at the specialist literature on the subject, however, shows just how lacking such courage is. By contrast, the literature is full of appeals to our good intentions, all kinds of noncommittal and unverifiable advice, and, above all, moral preaching. Everything, all cruelty endured in childhood, is to be forgiven. If that doesn't do the trick, then the state must pay for the lifelong care and treatment of invalids and the chronically ill. But with the help of the truth, they could be cured.It has now been proved that though repression may be crucial for a child, it should not necessarily be the fate of adults. A small child's dependency on its parents, its trust in them, its longing to love and be loved, are limitless. To exploit this dependency, to deceive a child in its longing, confuse it, and then proceed to sell this as "child rearing" is a criminal act - a criminal act committed hourly and daily out of ignorance, indifference, and the refusal to give up such behavior. The fact that the majority of such crimes are committed unconsciously does not, unfortunately, allay the calamitous consequences. The abused child's body will register the truth, while its consciousness refuses to acknowledge it. By repressing the pain and the accompanying situations, the infantile organism averts death-its fate, were it to consciously experience such traumatization.

What remains is the vicious circle of repression: the true story, which has been suppressed in the body, produces symptoms so that it could at last be recognized and taken seriously. But our consciousness refuses to comply, just as it did in childhood - because it was then that it learned the life-saving function of repression, and because no one has subsequently explained that as grown-ups we are not condemned to die of our knowledge, that, on the contrary , such knowledge would help us in our quest for health.

The dangerous teaching of "poisonous pedagogy" - "Thou Shalt Not Be Aware Of What Was Done To You " - reappears in the methods of treatment practiced by doctors, psychiatrists, and therapists. With medication and mystifying theories they try to influence their patients' memories as deeply as possible, in order that they never find the cause of their illness. These lie, almost without exception, in the psychic and physical mistreatment and neglect suffered in childhood.

Today, we know that AIDS and cancer involve a drastic collapse of the body's immune system, and that this physical "resignation " precedes the sick person's loss of hope. Incredibly, hardly anyone has taken the step that these discoveries suggest: that we can regain our hope, if our distress signals are finally heard. If our repressed, hidden story is at last perceived with full consciousness, even our immune system can regenerate itself. But who is there to help, when all the "helpers" fear their own personal history? And so we play the game of blindman's buff with each other-patients, doctors, medical authorities-because until now only a few people have experienced the fact that emotional access to the truth is the indispensable precondition of healing. In the long run, we can only function with consciousness of the truth. This also holds for our physical well-being. Bogus traditional morality, destructive religious interpretations, and confusion in our methods of child rearing all make this experience harder and hinder our initiative. Without a doubt, the pharmaceutical industry also profits from our blindness and despondency. However, each of us has been given only one life and only one body. It refuses to be fooled, insisting with all means at its disposal that we do not deceive it. …

*I have slightly revised the last two paragraphs for this revised edition after reviewing a letter from Louise Wisechild, who provided me with more specific information about her own view of her therapy.

By Alice Miller

Source: Alice Miller's website

© 2006 Alice Miller

Comment: Alice Miller has saved my life and gave me a real chance to have a emotionally honest relationship with my son and daughter throught her work and insight. I still have some way to go, but I'm getting there. :) Big thanks to Alice Miller.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Abuse, trauma effects linger

Disease often linked to childhood events, doctor tells summit

AUBURN - Children who suffer emotional, physical or sexual abuse at home are more likely to become unhealthy adults, a health study found.

American health care providers need to recognize the important role childhood trauma plays later in life, said Dr. Vincent Felitti, a clinical professor of medicine at the University of California who spoke Tuesday at the Maine Governor's 10th Annual Summit on Cardiovascular Health.

Felitti said an $8 million "ACE" study of 440,000 people probed their childhoods for abnormal traits and found a direct link between adverse childhood experiences and health problems in adulthood.

He cited a case of two sisters who were grossly overweight. It wasn't a genetic trait despite the traditional thinking of health professionals. The women identified sexual molestation as a major factor that led to abnormal eating habits.

One of the women dropped from 408 pounds to 132 pounds after an extreme weight-loss regimen at a health clinic. When she quickly regained the weight, Felitti probed her past. She revealed a childhood of molestation. She said she suspected she had a sleep-eating disorder. She would awake in the morning to find used pots and pans in her kitchen, but would have no recollection of eating during the night. She realized her recent weight gain was triggered by a man who propositioned her.

"It was a remarkably important case,"

Felitti said.The notion of tracing heart disease to a dysfunctional family runs contrary to conventional thinking, Felitti said. But the statistics have convinced him of the importance of preventing trauma in children. Despite the pivotal findings, no major health care provider has changed the way it goes about diagnosing and treating health problems to date, Felitti said.

He urged health care professionals to start conducting extensive biopsychosocial and trauma-oriented histories of their patients in an effort to get at the underlying reasons for their poor health."It's feasible, affordable and acceptable," he said.Some questions doctors should be asking their patients are:

  • Have you lived in a war zone?
  • Have you been a combat soldier?
  • Who in the family has committed suicide?
  • Who in the family has been murdered?
  • Have you ever been molested as a child?
  • Have you ever been raped

Health providers need to ask their patients how their traumatic childhoods have affected them later in life, Felitti said.

The study showed that the chances of a woman being raped as an adult are more than 30 percent higher if she answered "yes" to four or more adverse childhood experiences, such as sexual abuse or neglect, Felitti said.

"That's really extraordinary," he said.

Adult health risk factors that are linked directly to childhood experiences include: alcohol and drug abuse, smoking, obesity, depression, sexually transmitted diseases and heart disease, Felitti said.

Addictive behavior also is linked to childhood experiences, he said. People seek to block the pain and memory of their childhoods by using mind-altering substances, he said. And those substances, in turn, end up affecting their health.

ACE study

Of the people who took part in the ACE study, most identified a childhood risk factor, including those who were subjected to:

  • emotional abuse, 11 percent;
  • physical abuse, 28 percent;
  • sexual abuse, 22 percent;
  • emotional neglect, 15 percent;
  • alcoholism and drug abuse in the home, 27 percent;
  • loss of a biological parent before age 18, 23 percent;
  • depression or mental health issues at home, 17 percent; and
  • mother treated violently, 13 percent.

Source: Sun Jounal.Com

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Social education on menu for schoolchildren


School meals are to become part of social education, to ensure every child learns how to sit down and eat with friends every day, according to the SNP's new Education Secretary.

Fiona Hyslop has announced a £5m pilot scheme to offer free, nutritious school meals to all primary one to three pupils in some of Scotland's most deprived areas. The pilot will run from October to March next year.

The SNP wants to roll out free school meals to all Scottish pupils, starting with the most deprived and youngest, but the new administration wants to firstly research the impact on health, social skills, eating habits at home, as well as the problems there may be in finding the catering and dining hall capacity.

The announcement precedes the publication of official statistics tomorrow showing how many pupils receive free school meals, with 71,000 currently entitled to them. Nearly 100,000 more have parents dependent on benefits and who would have been the target for expanding the scheme if Labour had remained in power.

Ms Hyslop said: "This is about more than school meals. I want Scotland to be healthier. It's a new way of working across the health and schools agenda to benefit Scotland. Through these pilots many more children will enjoy the benefits of nutritious free school meals.

"The pilot itself will bring its own short-term benefits in terms of health and nutrition for some of our poorest children. The main aim is for our youngest children to develop a taste for healthy foods and the social skills that come from sitting down to eat with friends every day."

John Dickie, head of the Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland, described the announcement as an important step forward.

He said: "Universal free school meals could make a huge impact in tackling family poverty and improving children's health and ability to learn.

"We already know from experience in Hull, and further afield in Finland, that universal provision has a dramatic effect on the take-up of healthy school meals and on pupils' concentration and behaviour, so the sooner the new Scottish government rolls out free school meals to all children the better.

"It is also vital ministers ensure that targeting the initial pilots so narrowly does not undermine the potential value of a universal approach."

Source: The Herald

Also See:Free School Meals Bill Blocked

Labour leave children with empty plates