There’s lots of evidence that feeling supported can help protect children from harmful impacts. It also protects their mental health when they experience things like bullying, parental separation or disasters in their community.
Help your child to build a team around them that includes their peers (friends, siblings and cousins around their age), extended family members (e.g. aunt, grandparent) and other supportive adults (e.g. a sports coach or favourite teacher). There is no perfect size for your child’s support network; it might be made up of several people, or just one or two key individuals you and your child trust and can rely on.
Children often know best which people (or places or things) in their lives they feel most connected to and who give them a sense of belonging or support when they need it.
If your child has trouble identifying or choosing people to be in their support network, brainstorm together. Try asking them:
- ‘Outside of our family, who do you like to have fun with?’
- ‘Who do you feel safe with? If you were sad or worried about something, who could you talk to?’
- ‘Who do you hang out with at school?’
- ‘If you had a problem or felt upset at school, which adult could you go to?’
Remind them it doesn’t have to be their current homeroom teacher – it might be a previous teacher, the school counsellor, a year level coordinator or someone else they feel comfortable talking to.
Talk to your child about who’s in their support team and the different roles they have. For example, Grandma might be the person they go to when they don’t want to talk about problems, they just want a hug and to watch TV together. Their older sister might be the person they talk to when they want advice about how to deal with stuff at school.
If your children are around six to 12 years old, you could show them our video with young people talking about the ‘support heroes’ in their lives. Then have a chat with your child about the people in their life who support them in different ways.
With preschoolers or young children, ask them to hold out their hand and tuck in a finger each time they name:
- someone who is safe
- someone they can trust
- someone who is kind;
- and so on.
See if they can think of enough people to ‘fill’ both their hands. You can trace around their hand on a piece of paper and write the names of those people on the fingers, then stick it up on the fridge or in their bedroom as a reminder of who’s in their support team.