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Making the Move Easy on the Kids Moving from one house
to another is seldom easy and fun for adults and it can be especially
troubling for the children. But if parents deal with their children's
concerns and needs thoughtfully, much of that distress and discomfort
can be avoided. Children see moves differently than their parent's do,
and they benefit much less from the change in their comfortable routines,
or so it seems at the time. Most often, a change in houses or communities
heralds an important step forward for the adult members of the family.
The family moves because Daddy or Mommy has a great new job or a promotion
in reward for years of hard work. They move because financial success
has allowed the purchase of a bigger and nicer house in a more costly
neighborhood. They move because they can finally afford private bedrooms
for each child and perhaps a pool in the back yard. In the 1990's, mobile
and hard striving people typically live in a house for about four years
and then move on as their careers or fortunes allow. That short time span
is only a small percentage of the life-to-date for a 30 or 40 year old,
but the same four years is half the life-time of an 8 year old, and it
includes almost all the years he or she can remember. To a parent, this
house may be only the place they have lived recently. They think of it
as a way station on the road of life. To kids, however, it may be the
only home they have ever really known. This is their house, the place
they feel safe and comfortable and thoroughly at home. A house is much
more than a roof and walls to a child. It is the center of his or her
world. A move threatens to take that sphere away and leave something totally
strange in its place. The familiar friends, schools, shops and theaters,
the streets, trees and parks - all will no longer exist for them. Everything
soon will be strange, and they will live in someone else's world. The
impact of a move on a typical child starts about the time he or she first
hears that Daddy has accepted a promotion, and often continues for about
a year, until the new house becomes home, and memories of the previous
place fade. It's not usually necessary to announce this big change to
children immediately, although they must hear about it from you before
someone else breaks the news. Most teenagers see themselves as adult members
of the family, and will probably feel they have been left out if they
don't hear everything from the first day. But it is probably not a good
idea to tell toddlers and preschoolers until they have to know. There
is no point in making them worry far in advance. Be sure to announce the
move in a totally positive way. You might say how proud you are that Daddy's
company has chosen him out of many other employees to manage a new office
in Cleveland. Talk about what a beautiful city Cleveland is how good the
schools are and how nice the people are. Tell truthful but very positive
stories about how nice the new house will be. Ask them what the favorite
things are in their lives now, and then try to make them happen in the
new home. If the new home is too far away to allow a visit by the entire
family after it has been selected, show the children pictures of it from
every angle. Videotape it, if you can. Emphasize the positive views and
be sure to include pictures of each child's new room. Try to name the
house with some romantic description like "Oak Hill" for the big trees
and the sloping lawn. |
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