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Reading in Style

Reading in Style

hooray for Lily

hooray for Lily

 
Buying Emotional Stability Print E-mail
Tuesday, 09 November 2010

Maddie has always been a worrier, and when she gets stuck on something it’s almost impossible to get her out of it before she’s good and ready. About two weeks ago, Maddie had a scary dream in which I left her and didn’t come back, ignoring her begging to “Come back, Mama!” as I drove away on my motorcycle (!). Ever since then, Maddie’s been stuck to me like glue. She cries when I leave at night – big sobbing tears, running-in-the-rain-after-me (literally) tears, the kind that break your heart tears. When I visit her class in school to help out, I have to pry her off me when I leave.

This has moved into other areas of her life, to the point that Maddie is now spectacularly unable to handle emotional disappointments. Can’t go to a friend’s house after school? Meltdown. Can’t choose which video to watch with Cora? Meltdown. Lose a book for bedtime? Meltdown of epic proportions.

Saturday, I’d had enough.

“Maddie,” I said, “Have you noticed that you have at least one meltdown a day these days?” I went on to point out all the times she’d had a recent emotional malfunction – didn’t get to have lemonade at a friend’s house; didn’t get to walk next to the friend she wanted to walk beside; found out her pink shirt was in the wash; and so on. Maddie looked back and agreed it’d been particularly bad recently.

“It’s just that I get so frustrated and I don’t know what to do with my feelings and I can’t figure out how to cope!” she said honestly. I often send her on breaks in such situations, but she sometimes works herself into an even greater frenzy and we’ve had a lot of lost time recently.

So we talked about ways to cope, and how to deal with emotions building up inside her. Maddie promised to work on it but sounded dubious, so I decided to sweeten the pot.

Our household currency is jewels – faceted glass stones of the kind you’d find in a craft store for flower arranging or something like that. I keep a jar in the kitchen, and both girls have their own jars for saving up. Unlike privileges, once you earn a jewel it can’t be taken away from you, and if you really want something you can do extra chores to earn jewels to “buy” it. Jewels are also awarded randomly for outstanding behavior. It’s basically money in a form they can understand.

Maddie is currently yearning for a Zhu-Zhu pet, and while I’ve told her to put it on her Christmas list, she’s saving up her jewels to “buy” one – and I put a hefty price of 20 jewels on it. It’s been slow going. So I told Maddie on Saturday that for the next few days, I’d give her two jewels (!) every day she goes the entire day without a meltdown.

Coincidentally, Maddie spent Sunday and Monday meltdown-free.

Maddie’s come close a few times, and I see her face tense up and her hands clench. But she walks away, or sits down and breathes heavily, or something, until she’s under control. I know it’s still hard for her to see me walk away at school or going off to teach, but she’s figuring this out – how to live with the dream still bothering her, how to cope when a friend doesn’t want to do things her way, how to simply get along in the world.

So hopefully we’ll have our more even-tempered Maddie back in our house very soon.

That, and a Zhu-Zhu pet, apparently.

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