Photo: Arwan Sutanto

As the grand-daughter of a woman (during the 1950s/1960s) suffering from a duodenal ulcer, who was sadly misdiagnosed as mentally ill and mistreated terribly because of that unfortunate misdiagnosis – I feel strongly about the care and management of people experiencing physical pain in the body, including children and youth. I also recognize that sometimes physical pain has origins back to unresolved trauma and emotional or intergenerational family pain for children and youth, which we can also learn to honour, work with, and support healing for. I once worked with helping a client heal her painful sinus condition by opening space up to explore her experience of unprocessed feelings related to her husband’s infidelity 10 years earlier. After three sessions, her physical pain was gone as this material was processed finally. Our inroad to healing the emotional pain expressed as a physical symptom.

Whatever the origins of physical pain, how we relationally tend to pain matters.

There is so much potential for a better approach to pain management, starting early in life with how we hold space for children in pain (and thus how they learn to hold themselves), and how we can help children to express their physical and emotional pain through the body. Children can learn to tend to, welcome, and explore their pain, instead of ignoring or suppressing it. We can also consider and learn about the use of alternative modalities for healing children’s pain.

art with childrean
Photo: Aaron Burden

Here are some ideas for when we are in the presence of a child’s reported pain: 

 

Lets all heal and help children to heal, in relationship to pain.