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Articles Healing Our Children, Healing Ourselves by Charlotte Reznick, Ph.D. "I dreamed that we were all asleep and then someone put our apartment on fire. I was scared. We got all our papers and went out but we couldn’t leave because they put the cars on fire. Some people were calling the police but the phone was cut. They were calling HELP POLICE but they didn’t come. So our neighbors came and help us put the fire out. So that is where I were when I waked up. I was scared." This is Alexandra Ortiz’s dream. Night after night she wakes in fear. Is her life in danger? Will the fires and shooting start again? Alexandra is a sweet, quiet, Hispanic girl living in South Central LA - heart of the recent riot zone. Her nightmares and fears are characteristic of many children all over the city today in the aftermath of the violence. One child tells how her mom complains that she is now kicking and pulling her hair in her sleep. She has no memory of this. Another boy dreams he is left alone in his house burning while everyone else in his family has escaped. One inner city family brought all their relatives together under one roof for comfort and safety. They parked their cars on the lawn as a barrier and all slept on the floor to try to avoid bullets. Good idea, since in the morning they found their cars riddled with bullets. When can they safely return to their homes? We may see reactions similar to the stages of grief and loss. Megan vacillates from fear to anger to denial. One day she can’t sleep and is worried about how to help her mom. She’s confused - there’s no electricity - no place to get food. She’s angry with the looters. Two days later she draws pretty pictures of her dog and new puppies as if nothing ever happened. Is this denial or hope, or a combination of both? Megan will need much time, talk, and understanding to work out her feelings. Children may also experience guilt over being involved in some of the wrongdoing or feel real or imagined guilt that they might have caused or increased the amount of disaster because of their behavior. Bernice and Jessica (not their real names), 6th graders at an inner city school, feel "really bad" about being involved in "looting" at a local dry cleaners. They got caught up in the mob’s "get your free clothes" attitude. We talked about the possibility of them returning what they had taken to their church. Bernice goes home and dreams: "I am going to my church to return the stuff and the priest turns into a soldier and tells me it is wrong to steal and he has to kill me. I start running and trip over President Bush and they get me and tie me around a pole and blindfold me and get the guns ready to shoot me. And the priest (soldier) says ‘shoot’ and I wake up before they shoot." |
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